https://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=Jerianne&feedformat=atomZineWiki - User contributions [en]2024-03-28T22:29:45ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.35.1https://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Falling_Apart&diff=109933Falling Apart2015-11-27T23:57:20Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Falling Apart''' is a zine on death, grief, mourning and loss.<br />
<br />
This zine was edited by [[Zippity Zinedra]] and has submissions from: ''Axel Claes'', ''Dawn Graham'', ''Julie Wright'', ''Aleicia'', ''Earla'', ''Roxane Heslop'', ''Zippity Zinedra'', ''Alison Postma'', ''Anonymous'', ''PJ Carmichael'' and ''Troublemaker''.<br />
<br />
The zine focuses on the taboo subject of grief after a loved one dies. It includes writing a letter to them as a way of communicating with the deceased, explaining how they died, how much they were loved and cared about, how the grieving cope and what the dead mean to them.<br />
<br />
''Falling Apart'' is a zine which shows we all deal with grief differently but the feelings of sorrow and loss are virtually the same. The zine also shares advice on grief to those reading and whom are also grieving.<br />
<br />
<br />
== Contact ==<br />
*tattoo_sweetie@hotmail.com<br />
<br />
<br />
== External Links ==<br />
*[https://www.facebook.com/ZippityZinedra Zippity Zinedra Press]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from Canada]]<br />
[[Category:Toronto Zines]]<br />
[[Category:Grief Zine]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Memories&diff=109932Memories2015-11-27T23:57:00Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Memories''' is a 14-page quarter size [[minizine]] contains 18 hand rendered illustrations of things that the artist, [[Lauren Lowery]], remembers from her childhood including (but not limited to) houses, landscapes, favorite books and the evening news. The illustrations are presented as diptychs on each page in a way that is meant to resemble a scrapbook. Each image was drawn at the Wassaic Project in Wassaic, NY in the summer of 2013. The zines were later assembled at the New Academy Press in Pittsburgh, PA.<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
[http://endlessrevolt.com ENDLESS/REVOLT]<br />
[http://etsy.com/shop/jetblackpress Jet Black Press]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Minizine]] [[Category:Art Zines]] [[Category:Pennsylvania Zines]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Falling_Apart&diff=109931Falling Apart2015-11-27T23:55:05Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Falling Apart''' is a zine on death, grief, mourning and loss.<br />
<br />
This zine was edited by [[Zippity Zinedra]] and has submissions from: ''Axel Claes'', ''Dawn Graham'', ''Julie Wright'', ''Aleicia'', ''Earla'', ''Roxane Heslop'', ''Zippity Zinedra'', ''Alison Postma'', ''Anonymous'', ''PJ Carmichael'' and ''Troublemaker''.<br />
<br />
The zine focuses on the taboo subject of grief after a loved one dies. It includes writing a letter to them as a way of communicating with the deceased, explaining how they died, how much they were loved and cared about, how the grieving cope and what the dead mean to them.<br />
<br />
''Falling Apart'' is a zine which shows we all deal with grief differently but the feelings of sorrow and loss are virtually the same. The zine also shares advice on grief to those reading and whom are also grieving.<br />
<br />
<br />
== Contact ==<br />
*tattoo_sweetie@hotmail.com<br />
<br />
<br />
== External Links ==<br />
*[https://www.facebook.com/ZippityZinedra Zippity Zinedra Press]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zines]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from Canada]]<br />
[[Category:Toronto Zines]]<br />
[[Category:Grief Zine]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Noemi_Martinez&diff=109930Noemi Martinez2015-11-27T23:54:29Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:Noemi.jpg|frame|Noemi Martinez]]<br />
<br />
'''Noemi Martinez''' is a zinester, zine editor, writer, poet and indie press publisher who lives in Weslaco, Texas. She has been involved in alternative forms of media since the late 90s. A single mother, her zines address issues of racism from a Chicana/Puerto Rican perspective, racism, white privilege, immigration, poverty, displacement and identity. In 2014 she started a small indie press, [http://www.hermanaresistpress.com Hermana Resist Press], with roots in DIY that focuses on the work of women and people of color. She has organized poetry events and zine events, including the first RGV ZineFest in the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rio_Grande_Valley Rio Grande Valley] and Mujerfest, a festival that ran for several years in the RGV that showcased women and women of color musicians, artists, artisans, and poets with discussions and workshops that were led by women and women of color. <br />
<br />
Born in Chicago, Illinois, Martinez moved to Edcouch, Texas when she was 9 with frequent trips and summers spent in Cerralvo, Nuevo Leon, Mexico. Moving to other small cities in the Rio Grande Valley, Martinez was living in La Blanca, Texas when she found [[Pander Zine Distro]] online. The first zine she ordered and read was [[Taryn Hipp]]'s [[Girl Swirl]]. She sought other women of color zinesters and found other women of color zinesters via Bianca who wrote [[Mamasita]], among other zines. She then found a number of zines by people of color that included [[Pure Tuna Fish]], [[Hard as Nails]], [[Bamboo Girl]], [[Quantify]], [[Framing Historica Theft]] and [[Casa de los Trucos]]. Inspired by these and noting the lack of zines by women of color, specifically zines by Chicanas, Martinez produced her first zine, [[Making of a Chicana]]. <br />
<br />
She is also the creator of the [[POC_Zinesters]] community at Livejournal. She was the owner of [[C/s distro]], which stocked and distributed zines by women and people of color. <br />
<br />
==Zines==<br />
* [[Hermana, Resist]] (six issues)<br />
*[[Aged Noise]]<br />
*[[Homespun Zine: DIY]] three issues<br />
*[[Making of a Chicana]]<br />
*[[Brothers]]<br />
*[[South Texas Experience]]<br />
*[[The Blue Metal Kettle]]<br />
*[[Lines from Acedia to Apatheia]]<br />
*[[Citrus Dreams]]<br />
*[[Hermana, Resist: The Poetry Selection]]<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
==Editor==<br />
*[[Voices Against Violence]]<br />
*[[Voces]]<br />
*[[Nos/Otras: Finding Gloria]]<br />
*[[MAIZ: Mujeres Activistas Insurgentes y zineras]]<br />
<br />
==Contributions==<br />
* [[Excerpts from Perzines]]<br />
*[[Mamaphiles]], issues 1,3 and 4<br />
*[[Xerography Debt]]-reviewer<br />
*[[Woven Zine]], issue 5<br />
*[[Speak! Zine]]<br />
*[[Revolutionary Motherhood Zine]]<br />
*[[Fear, Hope and Justice: Remembering those lost-Protecting Our Future]]<br />
*[[When Language Runs Dry]], issue four<br />
*[[Absent, Cause]], issue four<br />
<br />
==Featured Zinester==<br />
*[[Catbird #2]]<br />
<br />
==Zine Collection==<br />
In 2015, a collection of Hermana, Resist zines will be published by the small press [[Sweet Candy Press]]. <br />
<br />
==Zines in the Community==<br />
*In 2014, Martinez was selected as the curator for the [[Fly Away Zine Mobile]].<br />
*[[RGV Zine Machine and Library]]<br />
<br />
==Other Involvement==<br />
*Speak! Media, SPEAK Women of Color Media Collective, a fundraiser for single mothers of color to attend the Allied Media Conference. The group independently produced a zine, spoken word cd and teaching template. [http://wearespeaking.blogspot.com Speak! Media]<br />
*advisory panel for the first kids track at the Allied Media Conference<br />
*Women of Color Zines presentation, Allied Media Conference, 2007<br />
*[http://wakeupnew.blogspot.com/2008/12/speak-cd-by-radical-women-of-color.html Speak! Radical Women of Color CD]<br />
<br />
''Honors''<br />
*In the summer of 2014, Martinez was awarded the media maker single mother of color grant of awesomeness award by [http://kidzcitybaltimore.blogspot.com Kids City Baltimore]<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
* [http://www.twitter.com/hermanaresist.com Noemi's twitter]<br />
* [http://www.hermanaresist.com/ Official Website]<br />
* [http://feministing.com/archives/006364.html Feministing interview with Martinez]<br />
*[http://www.utne.com/community/fromthestacksmay112007.aspx#axzz36jSBWr4D From the Stacks: Hermana, Resist]<br />
*[http://www.hermanaresistpress.com Hermana Resist Press]<br />
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20080517084747/http://www.grrrlzines.net/interviews/hermanaresist.htm Grrrl Zine Network Interview with Hermana Resist]<br />
*[http://dspace.library.uvic.ca:8080/bitstream/handle/1828/795/davidson_2005.pdf Feminist Zines: Cutting and Pasting a New Wave]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zinester|Martinez]]<br />
[[Category:POC Zinester|Martinez]]<br />
[[Category:Texas Zinesters]]<br />
[[Category: Zine Book]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Noemi_Martinez&diff=109929Noemi Martinez2015-11-27T23:52:45Z<p>Jerianne: deleting non-applicable categories</p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:Noemi.jpg|frame|Noemi Martinez]]<br />
<br />
'''Noemi Martinez''' is a zinester, zine editor, writer, poet and indie press publisher who lives in Weslaco, Texas. She has been involved in alternative forms of media since the late 90s. A single mother, her zines address issues of racism from a Chicana/Puerto Rican perspective, racism, white privilege, immigration, poverty, displacement and identity. In 2014 she started a small indie press, [http://www.hermanaresistpress.com Hermana Resist Press], with roots in DIY that focuses on the work of women and people of color. She has organized poetry events and zine events, including the first RGV ZineFest in the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rio_Grande_Valley Rio Grande Valley] and Mujerfest, a festival that ran for several years in the RGV that showcased women and women of color musicians, artists, artisans, and poets with discussions and workshops that were led by women and women of color. <br />
<br />
Born in Chicago, Illinois, Martinez moved to Edcouch, Texas when she was 9 with frequent trips and summers spent in Cerralvo, Nuevo Leon, Mexico. Moving to other small cities in the Rio Grande Valley, Martinez was living in La Blanca, Texas when she found [[Pander Zine Distro]] online. The first zine she ordered and read was [[Taryn Hipp]]'s [[Girl Swirl]]. She sought other women of color zinesters and found other women of color zinesters via Bianca who wrote [[Mamasita]], among other zines. She then found a number of zines by people of color that included [[Pure Tuna Fish]], [[Hard as Nails]], [[Bamboo Girl]], [[Quantify]], [[Framing Historica Theft]] and [[Casa de los Trucos]]. Inspired by these and noting the lack of zines by women of color, specifically zines by Chicanas, Martinez produced her first zine, [[Making of a Chicana]]. <br />
<br />
She is also the creator of the [[POC_Zinesters]] community at Livejournal. She was the owner of [[C/s distro]], which stocked and distributed zines by women and people of color. <br />
<br />
==Zines==<br />
* [[Hermana, Resist]] (six issues)<br />
*[[Aged Noise]]<br />
*[[Homespun Zine: DIY]] three issues<br />
*[[Making of a Chicana]]<br />
*[[Brothers]]<br />
*[[South Texas Experience]]<br />
*[[The Blue Metal Kettle]]<br />
*[[Lines from Acedia to Apatheia]]<br />
*[[Citrus Dreams]]<br />
*[[Hermana, Resist: The Poetry Selection]]<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
==Editor==<br />
*[[Voices Against Violence]]<br />
*[[Voces]]<br />
*[[Nos/Otras: Finding Gloria]]<br />
*[[MAIZ: Mujeres Activistas Insurgentes y zineras]]<br />
<br />
==Contributions==<br />
* [[Excerpts from Perzines]]<br />
*[[Mamaphiles]], issues 1,3 and 4<br />
*[[Xerography Debt]]-reviewer<br />
*[[Woven Zine]], issue 5<br />
*[[Speak! Zine]]<br />
*[[Revolutionary Motherhood Zine]]<br />
*[[Fear, Hope and Justice: Remembering those lost-Protecting Our Future]]<br />
*[[When Language Runs Dry]], issue four<br />
*[[Absent, Cause]], issue four<br />
<br />
==Featured Zinester==<br />
*[[Catbird #2]]<br />
<br />
==Zine Collection==<br />
In 2015, a collection of Hermana, Resist zines will be published by the small press [[Sweet Candy Press]]. <br />
<br />
==Zines in the Community==<br />
*In 2014, Martinez was selected as the curator for the [[Fly Away Zine Mobile]].<br />
*[[RGV Zine Machine and Library]]<br />
<br />
==Other Involvement==<br />
*Speak! Media, SPEAK Women of Color Media Collective, a fundraiser for single mothers of color to attend the Allied Media Conference. The group independently produced a zine, spoken word cd and teaching template. [http://wearespeaking.blogspot.com Speak! Media]<br />
*advisory panel for the first kids track at the Allied Media Conference<br />
*Women of Color Zines presentation, Allied Media Conference, 2007<br />
*[http://wakeupnew.blogspot.com/2008/12/speak-cd-by-radical-women-of-color.html Speak! Radical Women of Color CD]<br />
<br />
''Honors''<br />
*In the summer of 2014, Martinez was awarded the media maker single mother of color grant of awesomeness award by [http://kidzcitybaltimore.blogspot.com Kids City Baltimore]<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
* [http://www.twitter.com/hermanaresist.com Noemi's twitter]<br />
* [http://www.hermanaresist.com/ Official Website]<br />
* [http://feministing.com/archives/006364.html Feministing interview with Martinez]<br />
*[http://www.utne.com/community/fromthestacksmay112007.aspx#axzz36jSBWr4D From the Stacks: Hermana, Resist]<br />
*[http://www.hermanaresistpress.com Hermana Resist Press]<br />
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20080517084747/http://www.grrrlzines.net/interviews/hermanaresist.htm Grrrl Zine Network Interview with Hermana Resist]<br />
*[http://dspace.library.uvic.ca:8080/bitstream/handle/1828/795/davidson_2005.pdf Feminist Zines: Cutting and Pasting a New Wave]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zinester|Martinez]]<br />
[[Category:POC Zinester|Martinez]]<br />
[[Category:Texas Zinesters]]<br />
[[Category: Zine Book]]<br />
[[Category: chronic pain]]<br />
[[Category: WOC Zines]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=5%A2_News,_The&diff=1099282015-11-27T23:51:17Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''The 5¢ News''' is a mini [[photozine]] of iPhone photos taken by Ed Tillman (aka [[InkWell]] on [[Main Page|ZineWiki]]). Issues are free or for trade. "The 5¢ News" is an 8 page mini zine with a fold out "poster image" folded on the reverse. There is generally no text in the zine except for the title brand on the fold out poster, the copyright notification on the back page and any text that may have been photographed. Each issue comes with a paper wrapper with the title and issue number.<br />
<br />
==Notes==<br />
The zine was printed in Los Feliz, CA using a color xerox machine, the paper band was done with an inkjet printer.<br />
<br />
==Issues==<br />
[[File:5cNews-Cover.jpg|150px|The 5¢ News, Issue 1 cover photo]]<br />
* Issue 1, <small>Printed: Nov 2015</small><br />
<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
<br />
* [http://www.edtillman.net/index.html Ed's website]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:2010's publications]] [[Category:California Zines]] [[Category:Photography Zine]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Everything.is.Fine.&diff=109927Everything.is.Fine.2015-11-27T23:50:45Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:eif.jpg|150px|right]]<br />
<br />
''Everything.is.Fine.'' is a perzine written by [[Nyxia Grey]]. The zine addresses eating disorder and recovery, body image, self-esteem, feminism, self-advocacy, grief, patriarchy, and sexual assault.<br />
<br />
''''it's now 2014 and looking back i can remember events not by what i felt or what i saw or did but by what i threw up.'''' <br />
<br />
<br />
==Issues to Date==<br />
* Everything.is.Fine. (digest size, b&w)<br />
* Everything.is.Fine. - 'Fear No Mirror' (digest size, b&w)<br />
* Everything.is.Fine. - special collage edition (full-color, 11.5 glossy)<br />
* Everything.is.Fine. - special 24-hour zine edition. (digest size, full color)<br />
<br />
==Other Zines by Nyxia Grey==<br />
* [[Rad Rag: Your Flow is Fly]]<br />
* [[Boo'ya Moon]]<br />
* [[Did that Hurt? Self-Advocacy for a Safe and Awesome Tattoo Experience]]<br />
* [[Cure Huntington's Disease]]<br />
* [[NYC Feminist Zine Fest Here I Come]]<br />
* [[Your Table is Ready]]<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
* [http://www.etsy.com/shop/ZinesByNyxia Etsy shop] <br />
* [http://www.facebook.com/everythingisfinezine Facebook] <br />
* [http://wemakezines.ning.com/profile/NyxiaGrey We Make Zines]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] <br />
[[Category:Perzine]]<br />
[[Category:Massachusetts Zines]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:Barnard Library Zine Collection]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Twin_Cities_Zinefest&diff=109926Twin Cities Zinefest2015-11-27T23:49:51Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Twin Cities Zinefest''' is a [[DIY]] craft, culture and self-publishing event held annually in Minneapolis–Saint Paul, Minnesota.<br />
<br />
== History ==<br />
<br />
Since 2004, the Twin Cities Zinefest has welcomed creatives, rebels, musicians and frustrated intellectuals to connect, create and share ideas. As the area’s premiere self-publishing event, Zinefest often features an art show, live music, guest speakers and panel discussions. Zinefest plays host to some of the Midwest’s best self-made talent.<br />
<br />
Zines (zeens) are self-published books made by people who care. They often cover topics that are not prominently discussed in mainstream media and speak to a small audience of like-minded readers. They can be hand-made or press-run by the power of the creator’s own cash or cunning. If you still have questions about whether something is a zine, you’re not alone. There’s a lot of gray area surrounding the products of small press. Just know that zines often lack proper publishers, distributors and attention. If you think you found something at Barnes & Noble that might be a zine, it isn’t. To hunt the zine in its natural habitat, you’ve got to come to Zinefest.<br />
<br />
== External Link ==<br />
<br />
* [http://www.tczinefest.org/ Twin Cities Zinefest website]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Zine_Librarians_Code_of_Ethics&diff=109925Zine Librarians Code of Ethics2015-11-27T23:49:18Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[File:ZLEthicsZine.png|200px|thumb|left]] The '''Zine Librarians Code of Ethics''' zine is a 'zineified' version of the Code of Ethics. The first edition was published in October of 2015 by the [[Zine Librarian Interest Group]]. <br />
<br />
From the website: "The Zine Librarians Code of Ethics is a tool to be used for acquiring, managing, preserving, and making accessible zines in a library setting, whether the collection is housed in a public, academic, or special library; an archives; or a basement. It is not intended to be prescriptive or the absolute word on the subject.<br />
<br />
We started drafting this at the 2014 Zine Librarians (un)Conference in Durham, NC and worked on it collaboratively over time and space. This is a snapshot of a living movement. We expect the Zine Librarians Code of Ethics to change over time, adapting as zine community moves."<br />
<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
<br />
* [http://zinelibraries.info/running-a-zine-library/code-of-ethics/ Official website including downloadable version of the zine]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zine Library]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=C/s_distro&diff=109924C/s distro2015-11-27T23:48:01Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''C/S Distro''' is a [[distro]] run by [[zinester]] [[Noemi Martinez]].<br />
<br />
==About==<br />
''The only distro of it's kind dedicated to having people of color's voices heard and projects seen. We are trans friendly, political, activist, mamas, theorists, cooks, poor, students, writers...striving to find the voices of writers that get lost on the white page.''<br />
<br />
== External Link ==<br />
*[http://www.csdistro.com C/S Distro]<br />
<br />
<br />
{{project-stub}}<br />
[[Category:Distro]] [[Category:Closed Distro]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Noemi_Martinez&diff=109923Noemi Martinez2015-11-27T23:47:36Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:Noemi.jpg|frame|Noemi Martinez]]<br />
<br />
'''Noemi Martinez''' is a zinester, zine editor, writer, poet and indie press publisher who lives in Weslaco, Texas. She has been involved in alternative forms of media since the late 90s. A single mother, her zines address issues of racism from a Chicana/Puerto Rican perspective, racism, white privilege, immigration, poverty, displacement and identity. In 2014 she started a small indie press, [http://www.hermanaresistpress.com Hermana Resist Press], with roots in DIY that focuses on the work of women and people of color. She has organized poetry events and zine events, including the first RGV ZineFest in the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rio_Grande_Valley Rio Grande Valley] and Mujerfest, a festival that ran for several years in the RGV that showcased women and women of color musicians, artists, artisans, and poets with discussions and workshops that were led by women and women of color. <br />
<br />
Born in Chicago, Illinois, Martinez moved to Edcouch, Texas when she was 9 with frequent trips and summers spent in Cerralvo, Nuevo Leon, Mexico. Moving to other small cities in the Rio Grande Valley, Martinez was living in La Blanca, Texas when she found [[Pander Zine Distro]] online. The first zine she ordered and read was [[Taryn Hipp]]'s [[Girl Swirl]]. She sought other women of color zinesters and found other women of color zinesters via Bianca who wrote [[Mamasita]], among other zines. She then found a number of zines by people of color that included [[Pure Tuna Fish]], [[Hard as Nails]], [[Bamboo Girl]], [[Quantify]], [[Framing Historica Theft]] and [[Casa de los Trucos]]. Inspired by these and noting the lack of zines by women of color, specifically zines by Chicanas, Martinez produced her first zine, [[Making of a Chicana]]. <br />
<br />
She is also the creator of the [[POC_Zinesters]] community at Livejournal. She was the owner of [[C/s distro]], which stocked and distributed zines by women and people of color. <br />
<br />
==Zines==<br />
* [[Hermana, Resist]] (six issues)<br />
*[[Aged Noise]]<br />
*[[Homespun Zine: DIY]] three issues<br />
*[[Making of a Chicana]]<br />
*[[Brothers]]<br />
*[[South Texas Experience]]<br />
*[[The Blue Metal Kettle]]<br />
*[[Lines from Acedia to Apatheia]]<br />
*[[Citrus Dreams]]<br />
*[[Hermana, Resist: The Poetry Selection]]<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
==Editor==<br />
*[[Voices Against Violence]]<br />
*[[Voces]]<br />
*[[Nos/Otras: Finding Gloria]]<br />
*[[MAIZ: Mujeres Activistas Insurgentes y zineras]]<br />
<br />
==Contributions==<br />
* [[Excerpts from Perzines]]<br />
*[[Mamaphiles]], issues 1,3 and 4<br />
*[[Xerography Debt]]-reviewer<br />
*[[Woven Zine]], issue 5<br />
*[[Speak! Zine]]<br />
*[[Revolutionary Motherhood Zine]]<br />
*[[Fear, Hope and Justice: Remembering those lost-Protecting Our Future]]<br />
*[[When Language Runs Dry]], issue four<br />
*[[Absent, Cause]], issue four<br />
<br />
==Featured Zinester==<br />
*[[Catbird #2]]<br />
<br />
==Zine Collection==<br />
In 2015, a collection of Hermana, Resist zines will be published by the small press [[Sweet Candy Press]]. <br />
<br />
==Zines in the Community==<br />
*In 2014, Martinez was selected as the curator for the [[Fly Away Zine Mobile]].<br />
*[[RGV Zine Machine and Library]]<br />
<br />
==Other Involvement==<br />
*Speak! Media, SPEAK Women of Color Media Collective, a fundraiser for single mothers of color to attend the Allied Media Conference. The group independently produced a zine, spoken word cd and teaching template. [http://wearespeaking.blogspot.com Speak! Media]<br />
*advisory panel for the first kids track at the Allied Media Conference<br />
*Women of Color Zines presentation, Allied Media Conference, 2007<br />
*[http://wakeupnew.blogspot.com/2008/12/speak-cd-by-radical-women-of-color.html Speak! Radical Women of Color CD]<br />
<br />
''Honors''<br />
*In the summer of 2014, Martinez was awarded the media maker single mother of color grant of awesomeness award by [http://kidzcitybaltimore.blogspot.com Kids City Baltimore]<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
* [http://www.twitter.com/hermanaresist.com Noemi's twitter]<br />
* [http://www.hermanaresist.com/ Official Website]<br />
* [http://feministing.com/archives/006364.html Feministing interview with Martinez]<br />
*[http://www.utne.com/community/fromthestacksmay112007.aspx#axzz36jSBWr4D From the Stacks: Hermana, Resist]<br />
*[http://www.hermanaresistpress.com Hermana Resist Press]<br />
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20080517084747/http://www.grrrlzines.net/interviews/hermanaresist.htm Grrrl Zine Network Interview with Hermana Resist]<br />
*[http://dspace.library.uvic.ca:8080/bitstream/handle/1828/795/davidson_2005.pdf Feminist Zines: Cutting and Pasting a New Wave]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zinester|Martinez]]<br />
[[Category:POC Zinester|Martinez]]<br />
[[Category:Texas Zinesters]]<br />
[[Category: Race & Ethnicity]]<br />
[[Category: Zine Book]]<br />
[[Category: chronic pain]]<br />
[[Category: poetry zines]]<br />
[[Category: Political Zines]]<br />
[[Category: WOC Zines]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Instant&diff=109922Instant2015-11-27T23:46:26Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Instant''' is a one-off [[artzine]] published by [[InkWell]] in Los Angeles, CA.<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
<br />
* [http://www.edtillman.net Ed Tillman's Personal Webstie]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Art Zines]] [[Category:2010's publications]] [[Category:California Zines]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Artzine&diff=109921Artzine2015-11-27T23:45:46Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>An '''art zine''' is a [[zine]] that is made by an artist or group of artist as an object of art in itself. Art zines often contain photos and drawings and generally have more pictures than text.<br />
<br />
==See Also==<br />
* [[:Category:Art Zines|List of art zines]]<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category: Term]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Category:Minnesota_Zines&diff=109920Category:Minnesota Zines2015-11-27T23:40:39Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>This is a list of [[zine]]s from the State of Minnesota, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
[[Category:American zines by state|Minnesota]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Category:Horror_Zines&diff=109917Category:Horror Zines2015-11-27T23:39:05Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Horror zines''' is a category listing for [[zines]] whose subject matter revolves around horror, splatter, exploitation and gore fandom.</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Category:Film_Zines&diff=109915Category:Film Zines2015-11-27T23:38:05Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>This is a list of zines whose primary content is about films.</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Category:Queensland_Zines&diff=109914Category:Queensland Zines2015-11-27T23:36:50Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>This is a list of zines from the state of Queensland (QLD), Australia.</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Talk:Dan_Halligan&diff=109888Talk:Dan Halligan2015-11-27T21:25:39Z<p>Jerianne: /* Special:RecentChanges is impossible to patrol because of all the new users */</p>
<hr />
<div><br />
K-rist, so this is what Gunderloy's old Factsheet Five mutated into. This is a massive amount of effort and undertaking you've helped to create here, and if there is anything I can do to help, please don't hesitate to shout out, as I can appreciate what has gone into this. Ended up doing a revised edition for Steve Sneyd's Iron Moon listings a little while back - took it from mimeograph (Que? It's a duplicator, by any other name) into the 20th Century. Will see if there is anything I can raid out of there to add to your listings. So many names from the past - but then I pre-date GenX, Bob Dobbs, Sub-Geni and a whole host of other fun-lovin' loony-tunes.<br />
<br />
Right, I'm off to wallow in nostalgia, and see about maybe putting together a proper old skool zine - you know - with a typewriter, scissors, Letraset for the titles, and rubberoid glue. Lots and lots of glue. You can never have enough <sniff> glue...<br />
<br />
Chuck C<br />
<br />
<br />
Don't know how this works. I thought I made some pages for my zine, but they are gone, whatever…<br />
<br />
one was under the name of Once Upon a time… puerto rico and the other etsetera. etsetera is still around somewhere, but not on the listings. write to: hagamoslo@gmail.com or let me know were they are<br />
<br />
<br />
Hey,<br />
Thanks for considering me putting up a new page for myself. It seemed likea greatidea.<br />
Thank once more<br />
-Erick<br />
==That sounds great!==<br />
<br />
Hi Dan, thanks so much for your offer! I very recently got a new computer with Windows XP and I really don't have any programs to speak of. I don't have "Photoshop" or "Illustrator", or any programs like that, so I can't resize my own scans. Eugenepunk resized a bunch for me, which was really great, but I don't want to impose on him each time I want to put up a new image on Zine Wiki! So, any help or any ideas you can offer would be really appreciated Dan, and thanks so much for your offer! It sounds great! [[User:InvisibleFriend|InvisibleFriend]] 01:54, 12 September 2007 (EDT)<br />
<br />
<br />
Hi Dan, i am a contributer to the Hey 5 zine tumblr, i was wondering if you could link it somewhere on your front page www.heyfive.tumblr.com<br />
<br />
thanks<br />
<br />
==Re:New Administrators==<br />
Hi Dan, thanks for letting me know. Now we can all fight over Zine Wiki policy! ; ) I'm just kidding. [[User:InvisibleFriend|InvisibleFriend]] 18:07, 11 December 2007 (EST)<br />
:Thanks Dan for making me an administrator!--[[User:Eugenepunk|Eugenepunk]] 03:04, 12 December 2007 (EST)<br />
==Hey Dan. We were wondering why there's a message at the top of every page - Warning: Missing argument 2 for w/ParserFunctionsLanguageGetMagic() in<br />
/homepages/33/d924998007/htdocs/wiki/extentions/ParserFunctions/ParserFunctions.php on line 144<br />
It seems to be on everyones' computer - does it also appear on yours?[[User:InvisibleFriend|InvisibleFriend]] 03:16, 2 March 2008 (EST)<br />
<br />
::Yeah, Alan's working on it. Apparently the server was hosting ZineWiki was hacked and it's not an easy fix. I know, it sucks! [[User:Dan10things|dan10things]] 13:12, 3 March 2008 (EST)<br />
<br />
== delete Template:Reflist ? ==<br />
<br />
Can you please delete [[Template:Reflist]]? I was going to add a few related templates, but I assumed they wouldn't solve the "Unknown extension tag "references"" error. --[[User:EarthFurst|EarthFurst]] 23:24, 14 February 2010 (UTC)<br />
<br />
Hi Dan,<br />
<br />
I had added Janet, a zine collaboration I'm a part of. It disappeared, so I've added the link again. I wonder if it seemed to violate copyright, so it was removed? Not sure...it's all our work. - Janet<br />
<br />
== Putting pictures on a page ==<br />
<br />
Hi dan,<br />
<br />
this is josh m. from noise noise noise. hows it going? hey, im trying to put pictures up on my pages, but i can't figure out how to do it. Help. joshmedsker@gmail.com<br />
<br />
== Interested in an article about Alaska zines? ==<br />
<br />
hey dan, <br />
<br />
i was wondering, would zinewiki need/be interested in an article about Alaska Zines? Something that could go at the front pages (if I'm understanding the "feature" thing correctly!)<br />
<br />
josh<br />
<br />
== A couple Crap Hound corrections... ==<br />
<br />
Hello! I just made several corrections and additions to the Crap Hound page and have two small requests for changes I can't figure out how to make myself: Could you correct the heading title to read "Crap Hound" (it's currently one word) and move it from the Washington zine list to the Oregon zine list? Thank you! xc<br />
<br />
==Not Seeing The Pageviews==<br />
<br />
Hi Dan, I just wanted to pop in and ask you about the pageviews. Ahem, not that I constantly look at my own page's views, but occasionally I do, and I noticed something... It's been at the exact same number for months on end. So I finally decided to ask some friends to post, just to see if it changed... and it didn't. So I was wondering if there's something wrong with the page counters, or whatever. It is not a super big deal, but I try to use the ZW pages to promote the zines, etc.. etc.. and I just wanted to make sure the stats were correct. Also, did you happen to see my post from a while back, about doing an article on a brief history of Alaska zines? Let me know, alright? take care,man----Josh<br />
<br />
==POC Zine Project introduction==<br />
Hi Dan,<br />
<br />
My name is Daniela and I am the founder of the POC Zine Project. I recently created this page for POCZP:<br />
<br />
http://zinewiki.com/Poc_zine_project<br />
<br />
Will you please let me know if I need to change anything? I tried to follow the formatting protocol but this is my first wiki entry, so I appreciate any tips :)<br />
<br />
Also, I'm having trouble finding a page on this wiki that lists zines by people of color. Does that exist, and if it doesn't, can I help create one?<br />
<br />
You can reach me at daniela@dcapmedia.com. Thanks again!<br />
<br />
== WikiStress ==<br />
<br />
I searched the ZineWiki site looking for WikiStress levels and it appears that they are not available here.<br><br />
Wikipedia has them available under Creative Commons licence.<br><br />
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Wikistress3D_4_v3.jpg WikiStress]<br><br><br />
<br />
How do I set that up here?<br />
--[[User:MikeNobody|<span style="color:#FF0000;">''MikeNobody''</span>]] [[User talk:Mike Nobody|<span style="color:#0000FF;">'''=/\='''</span>]] 17:27, 11 January 2014 (UTC)<br />
<br />
I don't think this would be very useful on ZineWiki. [[User:Dan10things|dan10things]] ([[User talk:Dan10things|talk]]) 15:40, 27 May 2015 (PDT)<br />
<br />
== Affiliated with Wikipedia? ==<br />
<br />
Hi Dan, I found your discussion through the "About Us/Contact" page, and I'm hoping you can answer my question. I want to use the "Mail Art" page as a resource for a school essay, and of course we can't use Wikipedia. I see that ZineWiki is powered by Wikimedia, but would it officially be considered an extension of Wikipedia?<br />
<br />
When I tried leaving a note on this discussion, I saw I had to login. I tried using my Wikipedia account and it didn't work, so I set up a new account for ZineWiki. This kind of leads me to believe ZineWiki is not an extension of Wikipedia.<br />
<br />
Thank you for your time!<br />
--[[User:Cannolicreations|Cannolicreations]] 19:10, 5 February 2014 (UTC)<br />
<br />
This response is way too late, but we aren't affiliated with Wikipedia, ZineWiki is it's own independent project created by zinesters and fans of zines. [[User:Dan10things|dan10things]] ([[User talk:Dan10things|talk]]) 15:41, 27 May 2015 (PDT)<br />
<br />
== Search not working? ==<br />
<br />
Hi Dan - Anna Culbertson at San Diego State University here. I'm looking to add an entry under zine libraries for our collection, but I'm finding that the search function required in the first step for creating a new page doesn't seem to be working. Do you know what's up? Thanks!<br />
<br />
:Hi Anna. :) I'm not Dan, but you could make a redlink here (just put the name of your zine library/collection in double-square-brackets) and then click through to create the new page? Like this: [[San Diego State University Zine Library]] - if you click through you should be able to create that page, so of course you can create whatever page you want. :)<br />
:But yeah, I agree that the search is broken, I found that out too yesterday. :S --[[User:Cassolotl|Cassolotl]] ([[User talk:Cassolotl|talk]]) 01:28, 7 July 2015 (PDT)<br />
::We are looking into this problem [[User:Dan10things|dan10things]] ([[User talk:Dan10things|talk]]) 10:17, 27 November 2015 (PST)<br />
<br />
==[[Special:RecentChanges]] is impossible to patrol because of all the new users==<br />
<br />
[[Special:RecentChanges]] is full of redlinky usernames who I'm pretty sure are not real people. I'm sure it's just bots and spammers, because there's several per minute and their usernames all fit a particular formula. If we could get some kind of thingy up in here that prevents non-humans from joining that would be really useful! --[[User:Cassolotl|Cassolotl]] ([[User talk:Cassolotl|talk]]) 01:28, 7 July 2015 (PDT)<br />
:Yes, we are aware this is happening and it's definitely suspicious behavior which we are going to try to block. So far we don't think it's created any problems though. [[User:Dan10things|dan10things]] ([[User talk:Dan10things|talk]]) 10:18, 27 November 2015 (PST)<br />
::If you select (Main) from the Namespace list at the top of the page, it won't show you the new users. [[User:Jerianne|Jerianne]] ([[User talk:Jerianne|talk]]) 13:25, 27 November 2015 (PST)<br />
<br />
== Art Zine page ==<br />
Well, I think I screwed up. I tried to edit/add a new category of ''Art Zine'' so that folks could read a explanation/definition, tag their zines and see a list, much like [[compzine]] but it doesn't link and the tag doesn't work. AND I am unable to delete the page I created. Is there someone who understands the system better than myself that can help me out?<br />
[[InkWell]] Sept 9, 2015 at 5:45PM or so.<br />
:I think it's not you and more because of the database problem creating new articles we are having right now. If you edit a comment like this one, and add a link to a non-existing article like [[art zine]], it should give you a clickable link to start and edit and article. That's the work around right now. [[User:Dan10things|dan10things]] ([[User talk:Dan10things|talk]]) 10:21, 27 November 2015 (PST)</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Wiki_tags&diff=109887Wiki tags2015-11-27T20:29:27Z<p>Jerianne: improving guidelines, formatting</p>
<hr />
<div>'''Wiki tags''' are one of the most useful items of code for cataloging on this site. By adding the following ''tags'' to the bottom of pages, they are dynamically cataloged for easier searching. <br />
<br />
Before creating a new category, check the [[Special:Categories|categories]] section, which lists all categories currently in use. When creating a new category, follow this guideline: topic categories are singular, but list categories are plural.<br />
<br />
The following are examples of ''tags'' currently in use, and should be inserted as the last item on the page:<br />
<br />
'''Zinester entries/profiles''' should include:<br />
<br />
*<nowiki>[[Category:Zinester|last name]]</nowiki> with the ''last name'' being replaced with the zinester's last name.<br />
<br />
*Zinester entries should also include location tag(s), if known. Ex: <nowiki>[[Category:California Zinesters]]</nowiki><br />
<br />
'''Zine entries''' should include:<br />
<br />
*<nowiki>[[Category:Zine]]</nowiki> and if the entry is for a review zine it should ''also'' include the tag, <nowiki>[[Category:Review Zine]]</nowiki><br />
<br />
*Zine entries should also include tags for genre (ex: <nowiki>[[Category:Science Fiction Zines]]</nowiki>), location of origin (ex: <nowiki>[[Category:Zines from Canada]]</nowiki>), and publication date (ex:<nowiki>[[Category:1990's publications]]</nowiki>), if known. <br />
<br />
'''Entries about Collectives''' should include:<br />
<br />
*<nowiki>[[Category:Collective]]</nowiki><br />
<br />
'''Distro entries''' should include:<br />
<br />
*<nowiki>[[Category:Distro]]</nowiki><br />
<br />
'''Event entries''' should include:<br />
<br />
*<nowiki>[[Category:Event]]</nowiki><br />
<br />
'''Website entries''' should include:<br />
<br />
*<nowiki>[[Category:Website]]</nowiki><br />
<br />
'''Library entries''' should include:<br />
<br />
*<nowiki>[[Category:Zine Library]]</nowiki><br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Term]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=ZineWiki:Manual_of_Style&diff=109886ZineWiki:Manual of Style2015-11-27T19:54:51Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>This '''Manual of Style''' has the simple purpose of making the encyclopedia easy to read by following a consistent format. The following rules do not claim to be the last word on ZineWiki style, but if everyone does it the same way, ZineWiki will be easier to read and use, not to mention easier to write and edit. The editors of new and existing articles should strive to have their articles follow these guidelines.<br />
<br />
Clear, informative, and unbiased writing is always more important than presentation and formatting. (It's easier for other editors to simply reformat an entry than to rewrite unclear or biased text.) ZineWiki does not require writers to follow all or any of these rules, but their efforts will be more appreciated when they do so.<br />
<br />
==General Editing Guidelines (Read this before you get started!)==<br />
ZineWiki is designed to be an online encyclopedia of [[zines]], [[zinesters]], zine resources, small publishing history and zine culture. Entries should be encyclopedia-like in nature. Avoid profanity, inside jokes, too much praise, plugging or hyping, and blatant commercialism. The idea is to list information and document zine history, not sell issues or promote yourself and your projects (i.e. list the contents of a zine's issues, but don't list the ordering price and information). Think about how your entry will hold up over time. Avoid saying "New issue coming October 2006" and other future dates unless you are willing to continually update the entry so it remains up-to-date.<br />
<br />
==Article titles and the article's first sentence==<br />
The title of the article should appear as early as possible; preferably in the first sentence. The first time the article mentions the title, put it in bold using three apostrophes — <code><nowiki>'''article title'''</nowiki></code> produces <span style="background-color: white">'''article title'''</span>. As a general rule, do not put links in the bold reiteration of the title or any section title. Also, try not to put other phrases in bold in the first sentence. Finally, keep the first sentence straight and to the point as to what the page is about. Two examples:<br />
<br />
"This '''Manual of Style''' is a style guide for ZineWiki."<br />
<br />
"'''Hip Cool''' is published in Deadwood, CA by [[Joe Blow]]." <br />
<br />
==Headings==<br />
Use the <tt>==</tt> (two equal signs) style markup for headings, not the <nowiki>'''</nowiki> (triple apostrophes) used to make words appear '''bold'''. Start with <tt>==</tt>, add the heading title, then end with <tt>==</tt>. This will produce a bold larger text heading with a line under it like at the beginning of this section.<br />
<br />
==Categories==<br />
There are various categories that will make it easy for others to find your zine. For instance, if your zine is published in the U.S.A., adding a category listing at the bottom of the page will make it possible for anyone looking for zines published in the U.S.A. to find yours. Here is an example: <br />
<br />
Category: Zines from the U.S.A.<br />
<br />
Then , simply add [[ at the front. <br />
Add ]] at the end.<br />
<br />
All countries follow the same format. Only the name of the country is different.<br />
<br />
You can further categorize by type of zine. For instance, if you are writing an article about a [[perzine]], just type<br />
<br />
Category: Perzine<br />
<br />
at the bottom of the page, then add [[ ]] before and after. Now anyone looking for perzines will be able to find your zine in that category. Many genres of zines follow this same format. Some common ones are:<br />
<br />
*Category: Punk<br />
*Category: Riot Grrrl<br />
*Category: Queer<br />
<br />
You can look under the [[Special:Categories|categories]] section to find one, or often several, that will best suit your own zine or article. Check this page about [[Wiki_tags|category standards]] before creating a new category. <br />
<br />
==Sample Simple Article Page==<br />
Below is a sample article page for listing a zine in the format we'd like people to use. You can simply cut and paste this when starting a new article and edit it to work for the new zine entry you are adding.<br />
<br />
<code><nowiki><br />
'''My Cool Zine''' was a [[perzine]] published by [[Sassy Sally]] throughout the 1990s from Portland, OR.</nowiki></code><br />
<br />
<code><nowiki><br />
Nine issues of My Cool Zine were published between 1994-1999. Each issue of My Cool Zine focused on Sally Sally's personal life, poetry, and issues like feminisim and self-empowerment. The zine also featured interviews with bands, including 7 Year Bitch, The Gits, and Bikini Kill. </nowiki></code><br />
<br />
<code><nowiki><br />
==External Links==<br />
</nowiki></code><br />
<br />
<code><nowiki><br />
* [http://www.mycoolzine.com Official website]</nowiki></code><br />
<br />
<code><nowiki><br />
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Perzine]]<br />
[[Category:1990's publications]] [[Category:Oregon Zines]]<br />
</nowiki></code></div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Main_Page&diff=109876Main Page2015-11-27T18:15:36Z<p>Jerianne: Reverted edits by Jerianne (talk) to last revision by Dan10things</p>
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<div style="top:+0.2em;font-size: 95%">ZineWiki: the zine encyclopedia that [[ZineWiki:Introduction|anyone can edit]]</div><br />
<div id="articlecount" style="width:100%;text-align:center;font-size:85%;">currently with [[Special:Statistics|{{NUMBEROFARTICLES}}]] original articles</div><br />
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'''ZineWiki''' is an open-source encyclopedia devoted to zines and independent media. It covers the history, production, distribution and culture of the small press.<br />
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! <h2 style="margin:0;background-color:#cedff2;font-size:120%;font-weight:bold;border:1px solid #a3b0bf;text-align:left;color:#000;padding:0.2em 0.4em;">[[ZineWiki:Introduction|First Time Here?]]</h2><br />
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'''ZineWiki''' is open to contributions, additions and [[ZineWiki:Introduction|editing from anyone]], anywhere, at any time. However, we do ask that you [[Special:Userlogin|register a free account first]], so that we can cut down on spam and malicious edits.<br />
* Wondering what a '''[[Zine|zine]]''' is?<br />
* Need help creating [[My_New_Page|your first new page]]?<br />
* Can't figure out how to [[Help:Editing|format the text or pages]]?<br />
* Find out more by reading the [[ZineWiki:Manual of Style|Manual of Style]].<br />
Or maybe you'd prefer to browse:<br />
* [[:Category:Distro|List of Distros]]<br />
* [[:Category:Event|List of Zine Events]]<br />
* [[:Category:Zine_Library|List of Zine Libraries]]<br />
* [[:Category:Zinester|List of Zinesters]]<br />
Feel free to add your project, contribute additional information to already existing pages, or to edit what’s already published. Subjects should be explained in terms of their relevance to zines and independent media.<br />
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|}<!-- Start of reference section --></div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Main_Page&diff=109875Main Page2015-11-27T18:14:50Z<p>Jerianne: Reverted edits by Dan10things (talk) to last revision by Jerianne</p>
<hr />
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<div style="font-size:162%;border:none;margin: 0;padding:.1em;color:#000">Welcome to '''[[ZineWiki:About|ZineWiki]]!'''</div><br />
<div style="top:+0.2em;font-size: 95%">ZineWiki: the zine encyclopedia that [[ZineWiki:Introduction|anyone can edit]]</div><br />
<div id="articlecount" style="width:100%;text-align:center;font-size:85%;">currently with [[Special:Statistics|{{NUMBEROFARTICLES}}]] original articles</div><br />
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'''ZineWiki''' is an open-source encyclopedia devoted to zines and independent media. It covers the history, production, distribution and culture of the small press.<br />
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! <h2 style="margin:0;background-color:#cef2e0;font-size:120%;font-weight:bold;border:1px solid #a3bfb1;text-align:left;color:#000;padding:0.2em 0.4em;">Featured Article!</h2><br />
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<br />
[[Image:572768.jpg|thumb|right|Thrift SCORE #1]]<br />
'''Thrift SCORE''' was a zine about thrifting by [[Al Hoff]], a woman reporter from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., who loves to thrift.<br />
<br />
Subtitled, "the zine about the fun of too much thrifting," ''Thrift SCORE'' was the ongoing chronicle of Al Hoff's adventures in thrift stores, which included her experiences with other shoppers, as well as descriptions of popular thrift store items in articles like "Collectible Mania," and tips on second-hand shopping. <br />
<br />
Issue 14, the final issue, was published in 1999. In the introduction, Hoff listed several reasons that she was ending the zine, including: "reproducing this has become a major headache," "I'm out of questions and mysteries," and "I hardly even thrift anymore." [[Thrift_Score|Read More...]]'''<br />
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! <h2 style="margin:0;background-color:#cedff2;font-size:120%;font-weight:bold;border:1px solid #a3b0bf;text-align:left;color:#000;padding:0.2em 0.4em;">[[ZineWiki:Introduction|First Time Here?]]</h2><br />
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'''ZineWiki''' is open to contributions, additions and [[ZineWiki:Introduction|editing from anyone]], anywhere, at any time. However, we do ask that you [[Special:Userlogin|register a free account first]], so that we can cut down on spam and malicious edits.<br />
* Wondering what a '''[[Zine|zine]]''' is?<br />
* Need help creating [[My_New_Page|your first new page]]?<br />
* Can't figure out how to [[Help:Editing|format the text or pages]]?<br />
* Find out more by reading the [[ZineWiki:Manual of Style|Manual of Style]].<br />
Or maybe you'd prefer to browse:<br />
* [[:Category:Distro|List of Distros]]<br />
* [[:Category:Event|List of Zine Events]]<br />
* [[:Category:Zine_Library|List of Zine Libraries]]<br />
* [[:Category:Zinester|List of Zinesters]]<br />
Feel free to add your project, contribute additional information to already existing pages, or to edit what’s already published. Subjects should be explained in terms of their relevance to zines and independent media.<br />
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|}<!-- Start of reference section --></div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Crap_Hound&diff=108623Crap Hound2015-05-11T01:34:20Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:craphound-cover.jpg|frame|Crap Hound cover]]<br />
<br />
Between a brief introduction and the end credits, '''Crap Hound''' edited by by [[Sean Tejaratchi]] is pure imagery. Each page is filled with high-contrast art, culled from vintage catalogs, advertising, obscure books, and found ephemera. Although widely used as an art and design resource, ''Crap Hound'' warns, "Many images in Crap Hound are copyrighted by lawsuit-friendly entities. Remember that Crap Hound is a mixture of social commentary and somewhat overindulgent graphic design. It is not a means to trample the fragile rights of huge corporations. Remember: there's no "U" in copyright infringement. Crap Hound officially urges you to obey all laws, all the time."<br />
<br />
Crap Hound was first self-published in 1994, in Portland, OR, with a print run of 500. Since 2005 it has been published by [[Show & Tell Press]] run by [[Chloe Eudaly]] of [[Reading Frenzy]]. In 2010, Show & Tell began publishing expanded new editions of the original issues, as well as new issues. While the format has remained the same, the length has increased to nearly 100 pages per issue and the current print run is 5000. <br />
<br />
Each issue explores one or more themes. As of October 2011 they are as follows:<br><br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #1: Death, Telephones & Scissors [1st edition out of print]<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #2: Sex & Kitchen Gadgets Part 1 [1st edition out of print]<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #3: Sex & Kitchen Gadgets Part 2 [1st edition out of print]<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #4: Clowns, Devils & Bait [1st edition out of print, 2nd edition published in 2010 (96 pages) in print]<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #5: Hands, Hearts & Eyes [1st edition published in 1996 (68 pages), out of print; 2nd edition published in 2004 (76 pages), out of print; 3rd edition published in 2010 [88 pages], in print]<br />
* ''Crap Hound''' #6: Death, Telephones & Scissors [heavily revised and expanded reprint of #1, 4th edition published in 2012 (96 pages), in print]<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #7: Church & State Part 1 [out of print]<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #8: Superstitions [published in 2011 (96 pages), in print]<br />
<br />
It's found an wide, international audience with [[Zinester|zine makers]], graphic designers, crafters, and tattoo artists. It's distributed throughout the US, Canada, UK, Europe and Japan. Out-of-print issues are in high demand and run upwards of $100. <br />
<br />
As of fall 2011, Sean Tejaratchi has begun work on an book-length version of ''Crap Hound'' featuring "Unhappy People" for Feral House Press. Show & Tell Press will continue to reprint back issues and publish new issues as they are able.<br />
<br />
''Crap Hound'', and the art work of Sean Tejaratchi, was featured in the exhibition ''[[The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art]]'' in San Francisco in 2005.<br />
<br />
<br />
==External links==<br />
<br />
*[http://needles-pens.com/copyconsiracy.html ''The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art'']<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]][[Category:Musea Zine Hall of Fame]] [[Category:Previously Featured Articles|Craphound]]<br />
[[Category:Oregon Zines]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Crap_Hound&diff=108622Crap Hound2015-05-11T01:32:48Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:craphound-cover.jpg|frame|Crap Hound cover]]<br />
<br />
Between a brief introduction and the end credits, '''Crap Hound''' edited by by [[Sean Tejaratchi]] is pure imagery. Each page is filled with high-contrast art, culled from vintage catalogs, advertising, obscure books, and found ephemera. Although widely used as an art and design resource, ''Crap Hound'' warns, "Many images in Crap Hound are copyrighted by lawsuit-friendly entities. Remember that Crap Hound is a mixture of social commentary and somewhat overindulgent graphic design. It is not a means to trample the fragile rights of huge corporations. Remember: there's no "U" in copyright infringement. Crap Hound officially urges you to obey all laws, all the time."<br />
<br />
Crap Hound was first self-published in 1994, in Portland, OR, with a print run of 500. Since 2005 it has been published by [[Show & Tell Press]] run by [[Chloe Eudaly]] of [[Reading Frenzy]]. In 2010, Show & Tell began publishing expanded new editions of the original issues, as well as new issues. While the format has remained the same, the length has increased to nearly 100 pages per issue and the current print run is 5000. <br />
<br />
Each issue explores one or more themes. As of October 2011 they are as follows:<br><br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #1: Death, Telephones & Scissors (1st edition out of print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #2: Sex & Kitchen Gadgets Part 1 (1st edition out of print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #3: Sex & Kitchen Gadgets Part 2 (1st edition out of print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #4: Clowns, Devils & Bait (1st edition out of print, 2nd edition published in 2010 [96 pages] in print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #5: Hands, Hearts & Eyes (1st edition published in 1996 [68 pages], out of print; 2nd edition published in 2004 [76 pages], out of print; 3rd edition published in 2010 [88 pages], in print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound''' #6: Death, Telephones & Scissors (heavily revised and expanded reprint of #1, 4th edition published in 2012 [96 pages], in print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #7: Church & State Part 1 (out of print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #8: Superstitions (published in 2011 [96 pages], in print)<br />
<br />
It's found an wide, international audience with [[Zinester|zine makers]], graphic designers, crafters, and tattoo artists. It's distributed throughout the US, Canada, UK, Europe and Japan. Out-of-print issues are in high demand and run upwards of $100. <br />
<br />
As of fall 2011, Sean Tejaratchi has begun work on an book-length version of ''Crap Hound'' featuring "Unhappy People" for Feral House Press. Show & Tell Press will continue to reprint back issues and publish new issues as they are able.<br />
<br />
''Crap Hound'', and the art work of Sean Tejaratchi, was featured in the exhibition ''[[The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art]]'' in San Francisco in 2005.<br />
<br />
<br />
==External links==<br />
<br />
*[http://needles-pens.com/copyconsiracy.html ''The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art'']<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]][[Category:Musea Zine Hall of Fame]] [[Category:Previously Featured Articles|Craphound]]<br />
[[Category:Oregon Zines]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Crap_Hound&diff=108621Crap Hound2015-05-11T01:31:59Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:craphound-cover.jpg|frame|Crap Hound cover]]<br />
<br />
Between a brief introduction and the end credits, ''Crap Hound''' edited by by [[Sean Tejaratchi]] is pure imagery. Each page is filled with high-contrast art, culled from vintage catalogs, advertising, obscure books, and found ephemera. Although widely used as an art and design resource, ''Crap Hound'' warns, "Many images in Crap Hound are copyrighted by lawsuit-friendly entities. Remember that Crap Hound is a mixture of social commentary and somewhat overindulgent graphic design. It is not a means to trample the fragile rights of huge corporations. Remember: there's no "U" in copyright infringement. Crap Hound officially urges you to obey all laws, all the time."<br />
<br />
Crap Hound was first self-published in 1994, in Portland, OR, with a print run of 500. Since 2005 it has been published by [[Show & Tell Press]] run by [[Chloe Eudaly]] of [[Reading Frenzy]]. In 2010, Show & Tell began publishing expanded new editions of the original issues, as well as new issues. While the format has remained the same, the length has increased to nearly 100 pages per issue and the current print run is 5000. <br />
<br />
Each issue explores one or more themes. As of October 2011 they are as follows:<br><br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #1: Death, Telephones & Scissors (1st edition out of print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #2: Sex & Kitchen Gadgets Part 1 (1st edition out of print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #3: Sex & Kitchen Gadgets Part 2 (1st edition out of print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #4: Clowns, Devils & Bait (1st edition out of print, 2nd edition published in 2010 [96 pages] in print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #5: Hands, Hearts & Eyes (1st edition published in 1996 [68 pages], out of print; 2nd edition published in 2004 [76 pages], out of print; 3rd edition published in 2010 [88 pages], in print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound''' #6: Death, Telephones & Scissors (heavily revised and expanded reprint of #1, 4th edition published in 2012 [96 pages], in print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #7: Church & State Part 1 (out of print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #8: Superstitions (published in 2011 [96 pages], in print)<br />
<br />
It's found an wide, international audience with [[Zinester|zine makers]], graphic designers, crafters, and tattoo artists. It's distributed throughout the US, Canada, UK, Europe and Japan. Out-of-print issues are in high demand and run upwards of $100. <br />
<br />
As of fall 2011, Sean Tejaratchi has begun work on an book length version of Crap Hound featuring "Unhappy People" for Feral House Press. Show & Tell Press will continue to reprint back issues and publish new issues as they are able.<br />
<br />
Crap Hound, and the art work of Sean Tejaratchi, was featured in the exhibition ''[[The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art]]'' in San Francisco in 2005.<br />
<br />
<br />
==External links==<br />
<br />
*[http://needles-pens.com/copyconsiracy.html ''The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art'']<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]][[Category:Musea Zine Hall of Fame]] [[Category:Previously Featured Articles|Craphound]]<br />
[[Category:Oregon Zines]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Crap_Hound&diff=108620Crap Hound2015-05-11T01:31:32Z<p>Jerianne: added details, reorganization</p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:craphound-cover.jpg|frame|Crap Hound cover]]<br />
<br />
Between a brief introduction and the end credits, ''Crap Hound''' edited by by [[Sean Tejaratchi]] is pure imagery. Each page is filled with high-contrast art, culled from vintage catalogs, advertising, obscure books, and found ephemera. Although widely used as an art and design resource, ''Crap Hound'' warns, "Many images in Crap Hound are copyrighted by lawsuit-friendly entities. Remember that Crap Hound is a mixture of social commentary and somewhat overindulgent graphic design. It is not a means to trample the fragile rights of huge corporations. Remember: there's no "U" in copyright infringement. Crap Hound officially urges you to obey all laws, all the time."<br />
<br />
Crap Hound was first self-published in 1994, in Portland, OR, with a print run of 500. Since 2005 it has been published by [[Show & Tell Press]] run by [[Chloe Eudaly]] of [[Reading Frenzy]]. In 2010, Show & Tell began publishing expanded new editions of the original issues, as well as new issues. While the format has remained the same, the length has increased to nearly 100 pages per issue and the current print run is 5000. <br />
<br />
Each issue explores one or more themes. As of October 2011 they are as follows:<br><br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #1: Death, Telephones & Scissors (1st edition out of print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #2: Sex & Kitchen Gadgets Part 1 (1st edition out of print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #3: Sex & Kitchen Gadgets Part 2 (1st edition out of print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #4: Clowns, Devils & Bait (1st edition out of print, 2nd edition published in 2010 [96 pages] in print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #5: Hands, Hearts & Eyes (1st edition published in 1996 [68 pages], out of print; 2nd edition published in 2004 [76 pages], out of print; 3rd edition published in 2010 [88 pages], in print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound''' #6: Death, Telephones & Scissors (heavily revised and expanded reprint of #1, 4th edition published in 2012 [96 pages], in print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #7: Church & State Part 1 (out of print)<br />
* ''Crap Hound'' #8: Superstitions (published in 2011 [96 pages], in print)<br />
<br />
It's found an wide, international audience with [[Zinester|zine makers]], graphic designers, crafters, and tattoo artists. It's distributed throughout the US, Canada, UK, Europe and Japan. Out-of-print issues are in high demand and run upwards of $100. <br />
<br />
As of fall 2011, Sean Tejaratchi has begun work on an book length version of Crap Hound featuring "Unhappy People" for Feral House Press. Show & Tell Press will continue to reprint back issues and publish new issues as they are able.<br />
<br />
Crap Hound, and the art work of Sean Tejaratchi, was featured in the exhibition ''[[The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art]]'' in San Francisco in 2005.<br />
<br />
<br />
==External links==<br />
<br />
*[http://needles-pens.com/copyconsiracy.html ''The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art'']<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]][[Category:Musea Zine Hall of Fame]] [[Category:Previously Featured Articles|Craphound]]<br />
[[Category:Washington Zines]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Sean_Tejaratchi&diff=108619Sean Tejaratchi2015-05-11T01:30:11Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Sean Tejaratchi''' is a writer and graphic designer presently residing in Los Angeles, CA. He published the [[zine]] [[Crap Hound]], a collection of line art organized around one or more themes per issue, and the [[one-shot]] [[KOOL Man]] about the infamous [[Robert DuPree]]. <br />
<br />
He has also worked on numerous books and other projects and has contributed to zines such as [[Sugar Needle]]. His work was featured in the exhibition ''[[The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art]]'' in San Francisco. He is noted for his obsessiveness and absurd sense of humor.<br />
<br />
''Crap Hound'' reprints and new issues have been published by [[Show & Tell Press]] run by [[Chloe Eudaly]] of [[Reading Frenzy]] since 2005.<br />
<br />
Tejaratchi made a series of alphabet-themed prints for Reading Frenzy, which were published in a book in 2014. [[A is for Zebra]] is described as an alphabet, activity, and art book. <br />
<br />
==Publications==<br />
*''A is for Zebra''<br />
*[[Craphound]]<br />
*''Death Scenes: A Homocide Detective's Scrapbook'', edited and designed by Sean Tejaratchi; published by [[Feral House]]<br />
*[[KOOL Man]]<br />
<br />
<br />
==Contributions==<br />
<br />
*[[Sugar Needle]]<br />
<br />
== External Link ==<br />
<br />
[http://www.zinebook.com/interv/craphound.html Zinebook.com interview]<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zinester|Tejaratchi]] [[Category:California Zinesters|Tejaratchi]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Sean_Tejaratchi&diff=108618Sean Tejaratchi2015-05-11T01:29:55Z<p>Jerianne: added new title</p>
<hr />
<div>'''Sean Tejaratchi''' is a writer and graphic designer presently residing in Los Angeles, CA. He published the [[zine]] [[Crap Hound]], a collection of line art organized around one or more themes per issue, and the [[one-shot]] [[KOOL Man]] about the infamous [[Robert DuPree]]. <br />
<br />
He has also worked on numerous books and other projects and has contributed to zines such as [[Sugar Needle]]. His work was featured in the exhibition ''[[The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art]]'' in San Francisco. He is noted for his obsessiveness and absurd sense of humor.<br />
<br />
'''Crap Hound''' reprints and new issues have been published by [[Show & Tell Press]] run by [[Chloe Eudaly]] of [[Reading Frenzy]] since 2005.<br />
<br />
Tejaratchi made a series of alphabet-themed prints for Reading Frenzy, which were published in a book in 2014. [[A is for Zebra]] is described as an alphabet, activity, and art book. <br />
<br />
==Publications==<br />
*'''A is for Zebra'''<br />
*[[Craphound]]<br />
*''Death Scenes: A Homocide Detective's Scrapbook'', edited and designed by Sean Tejaratchi; published by [[Feral House]]<br />
*[[KOOL Man]]<br />
<br />
<br />
==Contributions==<br />
<br />
*[[Sugar Needle]]<br />
<br />
== External Link ==<br />
<br />
[http://www.zinebook.com/interv/craphound.html Zinebook.com interview]<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zinester|Tejaratchi]] [[Category:California Zinesters|Tejaratchi]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Talk:Craphound&diff=108617Talk:Craphound2015-05-11T01:11:28Z<p>Jerianne: Jerianne moved page Talk:Craphound to Talk:Crap Hound: title correction</p>
<hr />
<div>#REDIRECT [[Talk:Crap Hound]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Talk:Crap_Hound&diff=108616Talk:Crap Hound2015-05-11T01:11:28Z<p>Jerianne: Jerianne moved page Talk:Craphound to Talk:Crap Hound: title correction</p>
<hr />
<div>This article was featured on the front page of ZineWiki, the month of December 2007! [[User:Dan10things|dan10things]] 13:23, 5 December 2007 (EST)</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Craphound&diff=108615Craphound2015-05-11T01:11:28Z<p>Jerianne: Jerianne moved page Craphound to Crap Hound: title correction</p>
<hr />
<div>#REDIRECT [[Crap Hound]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Crap_Hound&diff=108614Crap Hound2015-05-11T01:11:27Z<p>Jerianne: Jerianne moved page Craphound to Crap Hound: title correction</p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:craphound-cover.jpg|frame|Crap Hound cover]]<br />
<br />
Between a brief introduction and the end credits, '''Crap Hound''' edited by by [[Sean Tejaratchi]] is pure imagery. Each page is filled with high-contrast art, culled from vintage catalogs, advertising, obscure books, and found ephemera. Although widely used as an art and design resource, '''Crap Hound''' warns, "Many images in Crap Hound are copyrighted by lawsuit-friendly entities. Remember that Crap Hound is a mixture of social commentary and somewhat overindulgent graphic design. It is not a means to trample the fragile rights of huge corporations. Remember: there's no "U" in copyright infringement. Crap Hound officially urges you to obey all laws, all the time."<br />
<br />
Each issue explores one or more themes. As of October 2011 they are as follows:<br><br />
Crap Hound #1: Death, Telephones & Scissors (out of print)<br><br />
Crap Hound #2: Sex & Kitchen Gadgets Part 1 (out of print)<br><br />
Crap Hound #3: Sex & Kitchen Gadgets Part 2 (out of print)<br><br />
Crap Hound #4: Clowns, Devils & Bait (1st edition out of print, 2nd edition in print)<br><br />
Crap Hound #5: Hands, Hearts & Eyes (1st & 2nd edition out of print, 3rd edition in print)<br><br />
Crap Hound #6: Death, Telephones & Scissors (heavily revised and expanded reprint of #1, out of print)<br><br />
Crap Hound #7: Church & State Part 1 (in print)<br><br />
Crap Hound #8: Superstitions (in print)<br> <br />
<br />
Crap Hound was first self-published in 1994, in Portland, OR with a print run of 500. Since 2005 it has been published by [[Show & Tell Press]] run by [[Chloe Eudaly]] of [[Reading Frenzy]]. While the format has remained the same, the length has increased to nearly 100 pages per issue and the current print run is 5000. It's found an wide, international audience with [[Zinester|zine makers]], graphic designers, crafters, and tattoo artists. It's distributed throughout the US, Canada, UK, Europe and Japan. Out-of-print issues are in high demand and run upwards of $100. <br />
<br />
As of fall 2011, Sean Tejaratchi has begun work on an book length version of Crap Hound featuring "Unhappy People" for Feral House Press. Show & Tell Press will continue to reprint back issues and publish new issues as they are able.<br />
<br />
Crap Hound, and the art work of Sean Tejaratchi, was featured in the exhibition ''[[The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art]]'' in San Francisco in 2005.<br />
<br />
<br />
==External links==<br />
<br />
*[http://needles-pens.com/copyconsiracy.html ''The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art'']<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]][[Category:Musea Zine Hall of Fame]] [[Category:Previously Featured Articles|Craphound]]<br />
[[Category:Washington Zines]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Crap_Hound&diff=108613Crap Hound2015-05-11T01:10:15Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:craphound-cover.jpg|frame|Crap Hound cover]]<br />
<br />
Between a brief introduction and the end credits, '''Crap Hound''' edited by by [[Sean Tejaratchi]] is pure imagery. Each page is filled with high-contrast art, culled from vintage catalogs, advertising, obscure books, and found ephemera. Although widely used as an art and design resource, '''Crap Hound''' warns, "Many images in Crap Hound are copyrighted by lawsuit-friendly entities. Remember that Crap Hound is a mixture of social commentary and somewhat overindulgent graphic design. It is not a means to trample the fragile rights of huge corporations. Remember: there's no "U" in copyright infringement. Crap Hound officially urges you to obey all laws, all the time."<br />
<br />
Each issue explores one or more themes. As of October 2011 they are as follows:<br><br />
Crap Hound #1: Death, Telephones & Scissors (out of print)<br><br />
Crap Hound #2: Sex & Kitchen Gadgets Part 1 (out of print)<br><br />
Crap Hound #3: Sex & Kitchen Gadgets Part 2 (out of print)<br><br />
Crap Hound #4: Clowns, Devils & Bait (1st edition out of print, 2nd edition in print)<br><br />
Crap Hound #5: Hands, Hearts & Eyes (1st & 2nd edition out of print, 3rd edition in print)<br><br />
Crap Hound #6: Death, Telephones & Scissors (heavily revised and expanded reprint of #1, out of print)<br><br />
Crap Hound #7: Church & State Part 1 (in print)<br><br />
Crap Hound #8: Superstitions (in print)<br> <br />
<br />
Crap Hound was first self-published in 1994, in Portland, OR with a print run of 500. Since 2005 it has been published by [[Show & Tell Press]] run by [[Chloe Eudaly]] of [[Reading Frenzy]]. While the format has remained the same, the length has increased to nearly 100 pages per issue and the current print run is 5000. It's found an wide, international audience with [[Zinester|zine makers]], graphic designers, crafters, and tattoo artists. It's distributed throughout the US, Canada, UK, Europe and Japan. Out-of-print issues are in high demand and run upwards of $100. <br />
<br />
As of fall 2011, Sean Tejaratchi has begun work on an book length version of Crap Hound featuring "Unhappy People" for Feral House Press. Show & Tell Press will continue to reprint back issues and publish new issues as they are able.<br />
<br />
Crap Hound, and the art work of Sean Tejaratchi, was featured in the exhibition ''[[The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art]]'' in San Francisco in 2005.<br />
<br />
<br />
==External links==<br />
<br />
*[http://needles-pens.com/copyconsiracy.html ''The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art'']<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]][[Category:Musea Zine Hall of Fame]] [[Category:Previously Featured Articles|Craphound]]<br />
[[Category:Washington Zines]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Al_Hoff&diff=108612Al Hoff2015-05-11T00:56:19Z<p>Jerianne: updated url</p>
<hr />
<div>'''Al Hoff''' is a zinester from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
Al Hoff is best known for her zine [[Thrift Score]], subtitled, "the zine about the fun of too much thrifting," which was the ongoing chronicle of Al Hoff‘s adventures in thrift stores, including her experiences with other shoppers, as well as descriptions of popular thrift store items and tips on second hand shopping. ''Thrift Score'' was published from 1994 till 1998.<br />
<br />
Around the same time Al Hoff began writing a regular column called "Pittsburgh: Don't Park Where You See a Chair" for the fanzine [[Oblong]], by Bruce Townley, which ran till 1998. <br />
<br />
In 1997, Hoff published the book ''Thrift Score: The Stuff, The Method, The Madness!''. That same year, she released [[If you like pina coladas...]], a one shot zine consisting of personal ads she had found, focusing on the weird, funny and disturbing ads in all categories. Al said she read 34,772 ads to make the zine. <br />
<br />
She released her next zine, [[I Can't Stop Watching Bad Movies]] in 1999.<br />
<br />
Al Hoff is of the founding members of Pittsburgh's annual craft fair, called "Handmade Arcade," that has been running since 2003. <br />
<br />
She is also a writer and editor at the '''Pittsburgh City Paper'''.<br />
<br />
===Books===<br />
*''Thrift Score: The Stuff, The Method, The Madness!'' (HarperCollins, ISBN 0060952091) 1997<br />
<br />
===Zines===<br />
*[[I Can't Stop Watching Bad Movies]]<br />
*[[If you like pina coladas...]]<br />
*[[Thrift Score]]<br />
<br />
===Contributions===<br />
*[[Oblong]]<br />
*[[Murder Can Be Fun]]<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
*[http://http://www.researchpubs.com/shop/zines-vol-ii-2/#tab-excerpts Interview with Al Hoff on ''Thrift Score'' from ''Zines!'' by Re/Search Publications]<br />
*[http://www.tinyrat.com/ Official website]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zinester|Hoff]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Thrift_Score&diff=108611Thrift Score2015-05-11T00:54:58Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:572768.jpg|right|frame|Thrift SCORE #1]]<br />
'''Thrift SCORE''' was a zine about thrifting by [[Al Hoff]], a woman reporter from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., who loves to thrift.<br />
<br />
Subtitled, "the zine about the fun of too much thrifting," ''Thrift SCORE'' was the ongoing chronicle of Al Hoff's adventures in thrift stores, which included her experiences with other shoppers, as well as descriptions of popular thrift store items in articles like "Collectible Mania," and tips on second-hand shopping.<br />
<br />
In 1997, Hoff published the book ''Thrift Score: The Stuff, The Method, The Madness!'' (HarperCollins, ISBN 0060952091)<br />
<br />
Issue 14, the final issue, was published in 1999. In the introduction, Hoff listed several reasons that she was ending the zine, including: "reproducing this has become a major headache," "I'm out of questions and mysteries," and "I hardly even thrift anymore."<br />
<br />
''Thrift SCORE'' is included in the Sarah and Jen Wolfe Zine Collection at The University of Iowa.<br />
<br />
===Issues===<br />
''#1 The Purse Phone!'': Weirdest Things Ever Thrifted, Stuff You See in Every Thrift, Can 70s Clothing Hurt You?, Trashy Books<br />
<br />
''#2 The Big Art Issue'': Interview with Jim Shaw (collector/exhibitor of Thrift Store Paintings), 75 Things I Hate About Thrift Shopping, kd lang's Shirt, Andy Warhol's Wigs, Shaft's Big Score, Wide World of Thrifts, Po$eur Alert<br />
<br />
''#3 Close-Up on Denim'': Part 1 of Crazy Things that Happened to Jeans (dawn of man - 1977), Russ Forster on 8-Tracks, Sal Vincent on Leftover Vinyl, Biggest Thrift Regrets, Use Your Thrift Dollars to Help Jim Bakker<br />
<br />
''#4 TOO Much Stuff?!?'': Stocking Up for that C.B. Radio Revival, Readers' Kooky Collections, Thrift-related Book Reviews, Checkin' Out the Thrift Scenes in Hamburg, Germany, and San Francisco<br />
<br />
''#5 How To'': Get Banned from a Thrift, Tell Fabrics Apart, Buy Paint-by-Numbers, Find a Thrift in Finland, plus ''Thrift SCORE'' TV Appearance, The Plastic Eye Miracle, Behind-the-Scenes Thrift Tales<br />
<br />
''#6 Swimsuit/Tiki Party Issue'': Thrift Your Way to a Tiki Party, Searching Out Cool Old Swimsuits, I Love K-tell Records, Chicago Thrift Report, Readers' Dream Thrift Items (includes Teeny Tiny Tiki Drink Book)<br />
<br />
''#7 Designer Jeans'': Part II of Jeans, Sewing Patterns, Thrift Crime Log, Behind-the-Scenes at the Goodwill, Thrift Items of the Future, Thrift Book Reviews<br />
<br />
''#8 Party Like It's 1976'': 20th Anniversary of the Bicentennial, The All-Metal Office, Manual Typewriters, Thrift Movie Scenes, Thriftin' with Tammy Faye Bakker, Suitcase Storage<br />
<br />
''#9 Fantasy Celeb Thrift Partners'': Sleep in Style - Pajamas!, Lamp + Plant = The Plamp, Thrifting Computer Game<br />
<br />
''#10 The Love Issue'': Romantic Board Games, To Date Thrifters or Non-Thrifters?, Harlequin Books, Singles Advice Books<br />
<br />
''#11 Thrift Karma and Dreams'': Thrift Store Dreams, Jeans Part III (The Scary 80s!), The Egg Chair, The Editor Meets Barney<br />
<br />
''#12 Mystery Bonus Finds'': Found Objects, Aluminum Xmas Trees, More Fun Thrifted Games and Gospel Records, Mending Tips<br />
<br />
''#13 The Big Rant Issue'': State of the Thrift Union, Collectible Mania, Thrift Store Upgrades, Billion Dollar Jeans, Thrifting for a Living, The Canyon of Used Dishes<br />
<br />
''#14 The Farewell Issue'': Positive outlooks, snapshots from halcyon days thrifting in Chicago, Wrecks and Records<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
*[http://www.researchpubs.com/shop/zines-vol-ii-2/#tab-excerpts Interview with Al Hoff on ''Thrift Score'' from ''Zines!'' by Re/Search Publications]<br />
*[http://www.tinyrat.com/ Official website]<br />
*[http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/msc/ToMsC900/MsC878/wolfesarahandjenzines.html Sarah and Jen Wolfe Zine Collection at The University of Iowa]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] <br />
[[Category:Musea Zine Hall of Fame]]<br />
[[Category:1990's publications]]<br />
[[Category:Pennsylvania Zines]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:Sarah and Jen Wolfe Zine Collection]]<br />
[[Category:Previously Featured Articles]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Main_Page&diff=108610Main Page2015-05-11T00:54:48Z<p>Jerianne: updated featured article</p>
<hr />
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'''ZineWiki''' is an open-source encyclopedia devoted to zines and independent media. It covers the history, production, distribution and culture of the small press.<br />
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<br />
[[Image:572768.jpg|thumb|right|Thrift SCORE #1]]<br />
'''Thrift SCORE''' was a zine about thrifting by [[Al Hoff]], a woman reporter from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., who loves to thrift.<br />
<br />
Subtitled, "the zine about the fun of too much thrifting," ''Thrift SCORE'' was the ongoing chronicle of Al Hoff's adventures in thrift stores, which included her experiences with other shoppers, as well as descriptions of popular thrift store items in articles like "Collectible Mania," and tips on second-hand shopping. <br />
<br />
Issue 14, the final issue, was published in 1999. In the introduction, Hoff listed several reasons that she was ending the zine, including: "reproducing this has become a major headache," "I'm out of questions and mysteries," and "I hardly even thrift anymore." [[Thrift_Score|Read More...]]'''<br />
<br />
|-<br />
|}<!-- Start of right-column --><br />
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! <h2 style="margin:0;background-color:#cedff2;font-size:120%;font-weight:bold;border:1px solid #a3b0bf;text-align:left;color:#000;padding:0.2em 0.4em;">[[ZineWiki:Introduction|First Time Here?]]</h2><br />
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|style="color:#000"|<br />
'''ZineWiki''' is open to contributions, additions and [[ZineWiki:Introduction|editing from anyone]], anywhere, at any time. However, we do ask that you [[Special:Userlogin|register a free account first]], so that we can cut down on spam and malicious edits.<br />
* Wondering what a '''[[Zine|zine]]''' is?<br />
* Need help creating [[My_New_Page|your first new page]]?<br />
* Can't figure out how to [[Help:Editing|format the text or pages]]?<br />
* Find out more by reading the [[ZineWiki:Manual of Style|Manual of Style]].<br />
Or maybe you'd prefer to browse:<br />
* [[:Category:Distro|List of Distros]]<br />
* [[:Category:Event|List of Zine Events]]<br />
* [[:Category:Zine_Library|List of Zine Libraries]]<br />
* [[:Category:Zinester|List of Zinesters]]<br />
Feel free to add your project, contribute additional information to already existing pages, or to edit what’s already published. Subjects should be explained in terms of their relevance to zines and independent media.<br />
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|}<!-- Start of reference section --></div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Talk:Thrift_Score&diff=108608Talk:Thrift Score2015-05-11T00:50:53Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>This article was the feature article on the front page of ZineWiki, May 2015! [[User:Jerianne|Jerianne]] ([[User talk:Jerianne|talk]]) 17:50, 10 May 2015 (PDT)<br />
<br />
<br />
I'm noticing some listings now having the first use of "Zine" capitalized. Is this the way they should look now or a mistake? Thanks!! [[User:Dan10things|dan10things]] 19:33, 21 August 2006 (EDT)<br />
:A mistake, unless it's referring to a proper name "Zine Yearbook" it should be kept lowercase. [[User:Alanlastufka|Alan Fall of Autumn]] 19:53, 21 August 2006 (EDT)</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Thrift_Score&diff=108606Thrift Score2015-05-11T00:49:02Z<p>Jerianne: added issue contents, made featured article</p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:572768.jpg|right|frame]]<br />
'''Thrift SCORE''' was a zine about thrifting by [[Al Hoff]], a woman reporter from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., who loves to thrift.<br />
<br />
Subtitled, "the zine about the fun of too much thrifting," ''Thrift SCORE'' was the ongoing chronicle of Al Hoff's adventures in thrift stores, which included her experiences with other shoppers, as well as descriptions of popular thrift store items in articles like "Collectible Mania," and tips on second-hand shopping.<br />
<br />
In 1997, Hoff published the book ''Thrift Score: The Stuff, The Method, The Madness!'' (HarperCollins, ISBN 0060952091)<br />
<br />
Issue 14, the final issue, was published in 1999. In the introduction, Hoff listed several reasons that she was ending the zine, including: "reproducing this has become a major headache," "I'm out of questions and mysteries," and "I hardly even thrift anymore."<br />
<br />
''Thrift SCORE'' is included in the Sarah and Jen Wolfe Zine Collection at The University of Iowa.<br />
<br />
===Issues===<br />
''#1 The Purse Phone!'': Weirdest Things Ever Thrifted, Stuff You See in Every Thrift, Can 70s Clothing Hurt You?, Trashy Books<br />
<br />
''#2 The Big Art Issue'': Interview with Jim Shaw (collector/exhibitor of Thrift Store Paintings), 75 Things I Hate About Thrift Shopping, kd lang's Shirt, Andy Warhol's Wigs, Shaft's Big Score, Wide World of Thrifts, Po$eur Alert<br />
<br />
''#3 Close-Up on Denim'': Part 1 of Crazy Things that Happened to Jeans (dawn of man - 1977), Russ Forster on 8-Tracks, Sal Vincent on Leftover Vinyl, Biggest Thrift Regrets, Use Your Thrift Dollars to Help Jim Bakker<br />
<br />
''#4 TOO Much Stuff?!?'': Stocking Up for that C.B. Radio Revival, Readers' Kooky Collections, Thrift-related Book Reviews, Checkin' Out the Thrift Scenes in Hamburg, Germany, and San Francisco<br />
<br />
''#5 How To'': Get Banned from a Thrift, Tell Fabrics Apart, Buy Paint-by-Numbers, Find a Thrift in Finland, plus ''Thrift SCORE'' TV Appearance, The Plastic Eye Miracle, Behind-the-Scenes Thrift Tales<br />
<br />
''#6 Swimsuit/Tiki Party Issue'': Thrift Your Way to a Tiki Party, Searching Out Cool Old Swimsuits, I Love K-tell Records, Chicago Thrift Report, Readers' Dream Thrift Items (includes Teeny Tiny Tiki Drink Book)<br />
<br />
''#7 Designer Jeans'': Part II of Jeans, Sewing Patterns, Thrift Crime Log, Behind-the-Scenes at the Goodwill, Thrift Items of the Future, Thrift Book Reviews<br />
<br />
''#8 Party Like It's 1976'': 20th Anniversary of the Bicentennial, The All-Metal Office, Manual Typewriters, Thrift Movie Scenes, Thriftin' with Tammy Faye Bakker, Suitcase Storage<br />
<br />
''#9 Fantasy Celeb Thrift Partners'': Sleep in Style - Pajamas!, Lamp + Plant = The Plamp, Thrifting Computer Game<br />
<br />
''#10 The Love Issue'': Romantic Board Games, To Date Thrifters or Non-Thrifters?, Harlequin Books, Singles Advice Books<br />
<br />
''#11 Thrift Karma and Dreams'': Thrift Store Dreams, Jeans Part III (The Scary 80s!), The Egg Chair, The Editor Meets Barney<br />
<br />
''#12 Mystery Bonus Finds'': Found Objects, Aluminum Xmas Trees, More Fun Thrifted Games and Gospel Records, Mending Tips<br />
<br />
''#13 The Big Rant Issue'': State of the Thrift Union, Collectible Mania, Thrift Store Upgrades, Billion Dollar Jeans, Thrifting for a Living, The Canyon of Used Dishes<br />
<br />
''#14 The Farewell Issue'': Positive outlooks, snapshots from halcyon days thrifting in Chicago, Wrecks and Records<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
*[http://www.researchpubs.com/shop/zines-vol-ii-2/#tab-excerpts Interview with Al Hoff on ''Thrift Score'' from ''Zines!'' by Re/Search Publications]<br />
*[http://www.tinyrat.com/ Official website]<br />
*[http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/msc/ToMsC900/MsC878/wolfesarahandjenzines.html Sarah and Jen Wolfe Zine Collection at The University of Iowa]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] <br />
[[Category:Musea Zine Hall of Fame]]<br />
[[Category:1990's publications]]<br />
[[Category:Pennsylvania Zines]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:Sarah and Jen Wolfe Zine Collection]]<br />
[[Category:Previously Featured Articles]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Thrift_Score&diff=108596Thrift Score2015-05-11T00:08:59Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:572768.jpg|right|frame]]<br />
'''Thrift Score''' was a zine about thrifting by [[Al Hoff]], a woman reporter from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., who loves to thrift.<br />
<br />
Subtitled, "the zine about the fun of too much thrifting," ''Thrift Score'' was the ongoing chronicle of Al Hoff's adventures in thrift stores, which included her experiences with other shoppers, as well as descriptions of popular thrift store items in articles like "Collectible Mania," and tips on second-hand shopping.<br />
<br />
In 1997, Hoff published the book ''Thrift Score: The Stuff, The Method, The Madness!'' (HarperCollins, ISBN 0060952091)<br />
<br />
''Thrift Score'' is included in the Sarah and Jen Wolfe Zine Collection at The University if Iowa.<br />
<br />
Al Hoff also published the zine [[If you like pina coladas...]].<br />
<br />
== External Links ==<br />
*[http://www.researchpubs.com/books/zine1exc2.php Interview with Al Hoff on ''Thrift Score'' from ''Zines!'' by Re/Search Publications]<br />
*[http://www.tinyrat.com/ Official website]<br />
*[http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/msc/ToMsC900/MsC878/wolfesarahandjenzines.html Sarah and Jen Wolfe Zine Collection at The University of Iowa]<br />
<br />
[[Category: Zine]] <br />
[[Category:Musea Zine Hall of Fame]]<br />
[[Category:1990's publications]]<br />
[[Category:Pennsylvania Zines]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:Sarah and Jen Wolfe Zine Collection]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Zine_World:_A_Reader%27s_Guide_to_the_Underground_Press&diff=107724Zine World: A Reader's Guide to the Underground Press2015-02-17T02:01:16Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:zine-world-cover.jpg|frame|Zine World #20]]<br />
[[Image:zine-world-cover24.jpg|frame|Zine World #24]]<br />
<br />
'''Zine World: A Reader's Guide to the Underground Press''' was an independent publication which covers independent and underground media. It was the largest review zine being published in the United States throughout the late 2000s. It reviewed mostly [[zine]]s, but also books, [[comic]]s, [[newsletter]]s, videos and spoken word recordings. The material it covered was generally available directly from the publishers, and each review included ordering information and other specifics (such as whether or not the item is free to prisoners, or the publisher's trade policy). Its news section covered free speech issues, and other topics of interest to the independent publishing community. It also included a word of mouth section, with reports on [[distro]]s and stores, zine libraries, other review zines, and publishing resources. It published columns by [[Karl Wenclas]], [[Jeff Somers]], [[Grant Schreiber]], [[Christoph Meyer]], [[Gianni Simone]], and other prominent underground writers. It featured illustrations by [[Alan Lastufka]], Sue Clancy, [[Violet Jones]], Cole Johnson, Mike Twohig, and a wide variety of other indie artists. <br />
<br />
The zine was launched as Zine World in 1996 by [[Doug Holland]] as a more opinionated alternative to [[Factsheet Five]], but has continued publishing since its larger competitor's disappearance in 1998. In 1999, it changed its name to A Reader's Guide to the Underground Press, and began using both names in 2003. It was once widely decried (in its own letters section, on the Usenet group [[alt.zines]], and elsewhere) for running gratuitously negative reviews (particularly from departed contributor [[Joe Gallo]]), but is now less controversial. It now publishes roughly three times a year. After Holland stepped down in 2000, [[Jerianne Thompson]] became editor/publisher and supervised the all-volunteer staff. The final issue, #31, was published in 2012. <br />
<br />
The review staff included: Ailecia Ruscin, [[Andrew Mall]], Chantel G., [[clint johns]], [[Dann Lennard]], [[Emerson Dameron]], [[e.war]], [[Heath Row]], [[Laura-Marie Taylor]], Ryan Mishap, Susan Boren, and [[Tom Hendricks]]. Past reviewers include: [[Alan Lastufka]], [[Artnoose|artnoose]], [[Wred Fright|Fred Wright]], Jason Koivu, [[Jeff Kay]], [[Joe Biel]], [[Joe Smith]], [[Kyle Bravo]], [[Marc Parker]], [[Michael Jackman]] (also former news editor), Stephanie Webb, and [[Violet Jones]].<br />
<br />
== Library Holdings ==<br />
<br />
* West Coast Zine Collection at San Diego State University <br />
* Sarah and Jen Wolfe Zine Collection at The University of Iowa.<br />
<br />
== External Links ==<br />
<br />
* [http://undergroundpress.org/ Zine World]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine|Zine]] [[Category:Previously Featured Articles]] [[Category:Review zines]] [[Category:Zine Yearbook]] [[Category:Musea Zine Hall of Fame]][[Category:1990's publications]] [[Category:2000's publications]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:West Coast Zine Collection]]<br />
[[Category:Sarah and Jen Wolfe Zine Collection]]<br />
[[Category:Revenge of Print]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Jerianne_Thompson&diff=107723Jerianne Thompson2015-02-17T01:58:27Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:Jerianne.jpg|frame|150px|Jerianne]]<br />
'''Jerianne Thompson''' was the publisher and editor of [[Zine World: A Reader's Guide to the Underground Press]], among other zines. She has also published a variety of perzines and a compilation zine about libraries. <br />
<br />
Thompson became involved in zines in 1994; her first perzine was [[A Shattered Mind]], which she started publishing as a college student in Tennessee. She has been a reviewer for Zine World since its first issue. In 1999 she moved to Berkeley, CA, and she started a new perzine, [[Rejected Band Names]]. While there, she began to assist Zine World's then-publisher [[Doug Holland]] with tasks like advertising, store distribution, and reviewer assignments. In 2000, Holland asked Thompson to take over as editor and publisher; she has been the zine's editor & publisher ever since. Her writing was featured in the [[Zine Yearbook]], Vol. 5. and Vol. 7. <br />
<br />
Thompson moved back to Tennessee in 2001 and worked at a public library, where she started a zine collection. Through her library work, she has presented numerous zine workshops. In February 2009, she took over administration of Zine Wiki, along with [[Dan Halligan]]. She has lived in Oregon since 2011. <br />
<br />
=Zines=<br />
* [[A Shattered Mind]] ([[perzine]]), 1994-1998<br />
* [[Zine World: A Reader's Guide to the Underground Press]], 1996-2012 (reviewer), 2000-2012 (editor & publisher)<br />
* [[Rejected Band Names]] ([[perzine]]), 1999-2004<br />
* [[How To Be A Good Library Patron/How To Be A Bad Library Patron]] ([[compzine]]), 2004<br />
* [[Worry Stone]] ([[perzine]]), 2008 <br />
* [[Butterfly Zine]] ([[one-shot]]), 2010<br />
* [[Mantis Zine]] ([[one-shot]]), 2011<br />
* [[Ladybug Zine]] ([[one-shot]]), 2012<br />
<br />
=External Links=<br />
* [http://www.undergroundpress.org/ Zine World]<br />
* [http://www.tnla.org/displaycommon.cfm?an=1&subarticlenbr=129 "Zine: It Rhymes With Teen,"] in ''Tennessee Libraries'', v57#1<br />
* [http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6652225.html?industryid=47384&source=title "Zines from a Tennessee Public Library: Or, Stop Being a Wuss and Start a Collection Already!"] in [[Library Journal]] <br />
<br />
[[Category:Zinester|Thompson]][[Category:Tennessee Zinesters]][[Category: Oregon Zinesters]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Talk:Main_Page&diff=107722Talk:Main Page2015-02-17T01:40:21Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div><div style="background:#EAFFEA; border: solid #B0FFB0 1px;float:right;padding:5px;">'''Talk archives'''<br/><br />
[[Talk:Main Page/Archive 1|Archive 1]]<br/><br />
[[Talk:Main Page/Archive 2|Archive 2]]<br />
</div><br />
<br />
So in December someone did a redirect on this page and there doesn't seem to be a way to revert the edit. Does that mean all the discussion that previously was here has been lost? What a bummer! [[User:Jerianne|Jerianne]] 15:59, 15 January 2013 (UTC)<br />
<br />
==Recommendations for Featured Articles==<br />
If you would like to suggest a page be selected as a featured article of the month, please add a comment here. [[User:Jerianne|Jerianne]] 15:59, 15 January 2013 (UTC)<br />
<br />
:People asked me about the "Featured Article of the Month" and if it still did not change. Yes it gets a bit boring, when you stop by regularly. More important: It also gives the impression that nothing is happening on ZineWiki. I think the article can be anything, even about a very unrecognised zine, as long as there is a cover. Zines are specialized. An unpopular zine is ok to be featured. It is not necessary that an featured article had 10.000 visitors already. A suggestion: Random choice with a little sorting. with kind regards--[[User:Silent service|Silent service]] 22:21, 27 February 2014 (UTC)<br />
<br />
----<br />
hello Jerianne, hello everybody - I would like to suggest the [[St. Patrick's Zine Library]] to be the featured article of '''March'''. I know it is a quite fresh article, but fore sure someone is planing to open the library again somewhere, according to the ''regular opening hours''. Part of the installation (on the 17th of March) is a computer to browse background information via ZineWiki. I guess bevor this date there will be some more new zines and articles added to this network;-) --[[User:Silent service|Silent service]] 22:41, 15 January 2013 (UTC)<br />
<br />
== SZFest zinewiki page copy of newspaper article ==<br />
<br />
[[Scranton Zine Fest]] is a copy of http://www.theweekender.com/cover/Real_social_networking_06-07-2011.html "by Stephanie DeBalko Weekender Staff Writer". Delete and then restart? --[[User:EarthFurst|EarthFurst]] 08:55, 28 January 2013 (UTC)<br />
<br />
Absolutely! Thanks for noticing!! [[User:InvisibleFriend|InvisibleFriend]] 12:48, 29 January 2013 (UTC)<br />
<br />
Hi, that was my zine page. All of those are reviews of the festival actually that I wanted to mke not eof on that page - Jess Meoni, SZF Coordinator<br />
<br />
== zine with the same title (duplicate) ==<br />
hello everybody. what do you do when there is a zine with the same title as an already existing article? are there some existing examples? any suggestions?--[[User:Silent service|Silent service]] 21:56, 11 March 2013 (UTC)<br />
:Hi! Yes, I've done a couple of things - if there are only two zines of the same title and they were published in different decades, I'll use the date, such as [[Bizarre (1950s)]]. If they were published in different countries, you can use the country,such as [[Oz (UK)]], If there are 3 titles, I use the editors name, like with [[Chaos (Miske)]]. I'm personally going to stick to using the editors name from now on, because there's really no way of knowing for sure if, for example, there were actually two zines called "Oz" published in the UK, in which case I'll have to go to all the trouble of changing it! I used the editor's name for ''Chaos'' zine because even though I didn't research it, I could imagine there might have been a few zines called "Chaos". So that's probably your best choice. [[User:InvisibleFriend|InvisibleFriend]] 07:26, 12 March 2013 (UTC)<br />
<br />
thanks! ...and a related topic: '''zines without a title (untitled)!?''' I think I will do it like: [[Untitled (finks)]] for example.--[[User:Silent service|Silent service]] 20:09, 18 March 2013 (UTC)<br />
:You are welcome! [[Untitled (Editor)]] sounds good. [[User:InvisibleFriend|InvisibleFriend]] 23:05, 18 March 2013 (UTC)<br />
<br />
== xZINECOREx ==<br />
Zine librarians are making a metadata standard to help with cataloging zines. Please consider including a table with [[Xzinecorex|xZINECOREx]] metadata when you are adding or editing entries for zines on ZineWiki; it will help their efforts to create a zine union catalog (a combined catalog that describes the collections of multiple libraries, enabling better information sharing for zine library collections). [[User:Jerianne|Jerianne]] 17:18, 19 July 2014 (UTC)<br />
<br />
== ZineWiki Updated ==<br />
We've updated the mediwiki software and ZineWiki logins are now working properly again. Sorry the site was un-editable for a while. Let us know if you find anything not working as it should. [[User:Jerianne|Jerianne]] ([[User talk:Jerianne|talk]]) 17:40, 16 February 2015 (PST)</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Jerianne_Thompson&diff=107721Jerianne Thompson2015-02-17T01:27:04Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:Jerianne.jpg|frame|150px|Jerianne]]<br />
'''Jerianne Thompson''' was the publisher and editor of [[Zine World: A Reader's Guide to the Underground Press]], among other zines. She has also published a variety of perzines and a compilation zine about libraries. <br />
<br />
Thompson became involved in zines in 1994; her first perzine was [[A Shattered Mind]], which she started publishing as a college student in Tennessee. She has been a reviewer for Zine World since its first issue. In 1999 she moved to Berkeley, CA, and she started a new perzine, [[Rejected Band Names]]. While there, she began to assist Zine World's then-publisher [[Doug Holland]] with tasks like advertising, store distribution, and reviewer assignments. In 2000, Holland asked Thompson to take over as editor and publisher; she has been the zine's editor & publisher ever since. She moved back to Tennessee in 2001. Her writing was featured in the [[Zine Yearbook]], Vol. 5. and Vol. 7. <br />
<br />
Currently, Thompson lives in Murfreesboro, TN. She works at a library, where she started a zine collection. Through her library work, she has presented numerous zine workshops. In February 2009, she took over administration of Zine Wiki, along with [[Dan Halligan]]. <br />
<br />
=Zines=<br />
* [[A Shattered Mind]] ([[perzine]]), 1994-1998<br />
* [[Zine World: A Reader's Guide to the Underground Press]], 1996-present (reviewer), 2000-present (editor & publisher)<br />
* [[Rejected Band Names]] ([[perzine]]), 1999-2004<br />
* [[How To Be A Good Library Patron/How To Be A Bad Library Patron]] ([[compzine]]), 2004<br />
* [[Worry Stone]] ([[perzine]]), 2008-present <br />
* [[Butterfly Zine]] ([[one-shot]]), 2010<br />
<br />
=External Links=<br />
* [http://www.undergroundpress.org/ Zine World]<br />
* [http://www.tnla.org/displaycommon.cfm?an=1&subarticlenbr=129 "Zine: It Rhymes With Teen,"] in ''Tennessee Libraries'', v57#1<br />
* [http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6652225.html?industryid=47384&source=title "Zines from a Tennessee Public Library: Or, Stop Being a Wuss and Start a Collection Already!"] in [[Library Journal]] <br />
<br />
[[Category:Zinester|Thompson]][[Category:Tennessee Zinesters]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Talk:TARDIS&diff=102783Talk:TARDIS2014-07-19T17:30:49Z<p>Jerianne: New page: This article was the feature article on the front page of ZineWiki, July 2014! ~~~~</p>
<hr />
<div>This article was the feature article on the front page of ZineWiki, July 2014! [[User:Jerianne|Jerianne]] 17:30, 19 July 2014 (UTC)</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=TARDIS&diff=102782TARDIS2014-07-19T17:30:12Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:11764_600_copy.jpg|right|frame|'''TARDIS''' <br/>Issue 8 July 1976<br/>Cover art by Stuart Glazebrook]]<br />
'''TARDIS''' was a fanzine published in London, UK, devoted to the television series ''Dr. Who''.<br />
<br />
First published in Spring 1975 by Andrew Johnson, the first issue of TARDIS featured a tribute to William Hartnell, an interview with Terry Nation and an article on ''The Six Million Dollar Man''.<br />
<br />
The second issue, published in November, came with the announcement that Johnson was handing ''TARDIS'' over to contributor Gordon Blows. The second issue featured cover art by Andrew' Johnson and an interview with screenwriter Malcolm Hulke by Gordon Blowes.<br />
<br />
Contributors of art work included Stuart Glazebrook, among others. Contributors of photographs included Stephen Payne, and Jan Vincent-Rudzki, among others. Contributors of writing included Jeremy Betham, Gordon Blowes, Geraint Jones, Jeanette Napier, Jan Vincent-Rudzki, and Martin Wiggins, among others.<br />
<br />
With issue 7 from May 1976, TARDIS became the fanzine for the Dr. Who Appreciation Society. The various editors from 1976 till the 1990s included Ann O'Neill, Geraldine Landen, Stephen Payne, Paul Mark Tams, David Farkil, Geraldine Landen, and Richard Walter.<br />
<br />
Contributors of writing included Pam Baddeley, Stephen Birchard, Neil Blomley, Gordon Blowes, Alec Charles, John Connors ([[Top]], [[Faze]]), Kevin Davies, Tim Dollin, Chris Dunk, Steven Evans, Gavin French, Sean Gibbons, Paul Hickling, Martin Holmes, Bill Hope, Andrew James, Geraint Jones, John Keung, Richard Landen, Howard Langford, Joe Latham, Chris Marton, Ian K. McLachlan, Colin Midlane, Paul Mount, Stephen Murphy, Thomas Noonan, Barbara O'Quinn, John Peel, Richard J. Price, David Rowe, Gordon Roxburgh, Gary Russell, David Saunders, Alan Smith, Owen Tudor, Jan Vincent-Rudzki, Richard Walter, Gordon Webster, Martin Wiggins<br />
<br />
Contributors of fan fiction included David Auger, Steven Evans, Geraint Jones, Gordon Lawson, Stephen Murphy, John Peel, Geoffrey Saunders, Robert Taylor, and Martin Wiggins<br />
<br />
Art work was contributed by Ronald Binnie, Tony Clark, Paul Cockburn, Matthew Cramer. Stuart Glazebrook, Gordon Langden, Andrew Martin, Susan Moore, Tim Pieraccini, Paul Stephen Smith, Paul Mark Tams, and Michael Walker. Photographs were contributed by Peter Davison, and Sarah Sutton. <br />
<br />
Comic strips were contributed by Raymond Bushby, Paul Cockburn, Stephen Crooks with Paul Hickling, Kevin Davies, Don Gerhart, and Richard Starkings.<br />
<br />
Writing from ''TARDIS'', along with fanzines such as [[Burnt Toast]], [[Enlightenment]], [[The Whostorian Quarterly]], and others, appear in the fanzine anthology, ''Time Unincorporated 2: The Doctor Who Fanzine Archives'', edited by Graeme Burk and Robert Smith, and published by Mad Norwegian Press in 2010.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the UK]]<br />
[[Category:London Zines]]<br />
[[Category:1970's publications]]<br />
[[Category:1980's publications]]<br />
[[Category:Media Science Fiction]]<br />
[[Category:Previously Featured Articles|TARDIS]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Main_Page&diff=102781Main Page2014-07-19T17:29:17Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div><!-- Beginning of header section -->{|style="width:100%;margin-top:+.7em;background-color:#fcfcfc;border:1px solid #ccc"<br />
|style="width:56%;color:#000"|<br />
{|style="width:280px;border:solid 0px;background:none"<br />
|-<br />
|style="width:280px;text-align:center;white-space:nowrap;color:#000" |<br />
<div style="font-size:162%;border:none;margin: 0;padding:.1em;color:#000">Welcome to '''[[ZineWiki:About|ZineWiki]]!'''</div><br />
<div style="top:+0.2em;font-size: 95%">ZineWiki: the zine encyclopedia that [[ZineWiki:Introduction|anyone can edit]]</div><br />
<div id="articlecount" style="width:100%;text-align:center;font-size:85%;">currently with [[Special:Statistics|{{NUMBEROFARTICLES}}]] original articles</div><br />
|}<!-- Portals Follow --><br />
|style="width:80%;font-size:95%;color:#000"|<br />
'''ZineWiki''' is an open-source encyclopedia devoted to zines and independent media. It covers the history, production, distribution and culture of the small press.<br />
|}<!-- End Portals --><br />
{{Title_navigation}}<br />
{{note}}<br />
<!-- End of header section / beginning of left-column --><br />
{|style="border-spacing:8px;margin:0px -8px"<br />
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{|width="100%" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5" style="vertical-align:top;background-color:#f5fffa"<br />
! <h2 style="margin:0;background-color:#cef2e0;font-size:120%;font-weight:bold;border:1px solid #a3bfb1;text-align:left;color:#000;padding:0.2em 0.4em;">Featured Article!</h2><br />
|-<br />
|style="color:#000|<br />
<br />
[[Image:11764_600_copy.jpg|thumb|right|TARDIS #8]]<br />
<br />
'''TARDIS''' was a fanzine published in London, UK, devoted to the television series ''Dr. Who''.<br />
<br />
First published in Spring 1975 by Andrew Johnson, the first issue of TARDIS featured a tribute to William Hartnell, an interview with Terry Nation and an article on ''The Six Million Dollar Man''. ... Contributors of art work included Stuart Glazebrook, among others. Contributors of photographs included Stephen Payne, and Jan Vincent-Rudzki, among others. Contributors of writing included Jeremy Betham, Gordon Blowes, Geraint Jones, Jeanette Napier, Jan Vincent-Rudzki, and Martin Wiggins, among others. <br />
<br />
With issue 7 from May 1976, TARDIS became the fanzine for the Dr. Who Appreciation Society. [[TARDIS|Read More...]]'''<br />
<br />
|-<br />
|}<!-- Start of right-column --><br />
|class="MainPageBG" style="width:45%;border:1px solid #cedff2;background-color:#f5faff;vertical-align:top"|<br />
{| width="100%" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5" style="vertical-align:top;background-color:#f5faff"<br />
! <h2 style="margin:0;background-color:#cedff2;font-size:120%;font-weight:bold;border:1px solid #a3b0bf;text-align:left;color:#000;padding:0.2em 0.4em;">[[ZineWiki:Introduction|First Time Here?]]</h2><br />
|-<br />
|style="color:#000"|<br />
'''ZineWiki''' is open to contributions, additions and [[ZineWiki:Introduction|editing from anyone]], anywhere, at any time. However, we do ask that you [[Special:Userlogin|register a free account first]], so that we can cut down on spam and malicious edits.<br />
* Wondering what a '''[[Zine|zine]]''' is?<br />
* Need help creating [[My_New_Page|your first new page]]?<br />
* Can't figure out how to [[Help:Editing|format the text or pages]]?<br />
* Find out more by reading the [[ZineWiki:Manual of Style|Manual of Style]].<br />
Or maybe you'd prefer to browse:<br />
* [[:Category:Distro|List of Distros]]<br />
* [[:Category:Event|List of Zine Events]]<br />
* [[:Category:Zine_Library|List of Zine Libraries]]<br />
* [[:Category:Zinester|List of Zinesters]]<br />
Feel free to add your project, contribute additional information to already existing pages, or to edit what’s already published. Subjects should be explained in terms of their relevance to zines and independent media.<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
|}<!-- Start of reference section --></div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Talk:Main_Page&diff=102780Talk:Main Page2014-07-19T17:18:15Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>So in December someone did a redirect on this page and there doesn't seem to be a way to revert the edit. Does that mean all the discussion that previously was here has been lost? What a bummer! [[User:Jerianne|Jerianne]] 15:59, 15 January 2013 (UTC)<br />
<br />
==Recommendations for Featured Articles==<br />
If you would like to suggest a page be selected as a featured article of the month, please add a comment here. [[User:Jerianne|Jerianne]] 15:59, 15 January 2013 (UTC)<br />
<br />
:People asked me about the "Featured Article of the Month" and if it still did not change. Yes it gets a bit boring, when you stop by regularly. More important: It also gives the impression that nothing is happening on ZineWiki. I think the article can be anything, even about a very unrecognised zine, as long as there is a cover. Zines are specialized. An unpopular zine is ok to be featured. It is not necessary that an featured article had 10.000 visitors already. A suggestion: Random choice with a little sorting. with kind regards--[[User:Silent service|Silent service]] 22:21, 27 February 2014 (UTC)<br />
<br />
----<br />
hello Jerianne, hello everybody - I would like to suggest the [[St. Patrick's Zine Library]] to be the featured article of '''March'''. I know it is a quite fresh article, but fore sure someone is planing to open the library again somewhere, according to the ''regular opening hours''. Part of the installation (on the 17th of March) is a computer to browse background information via ZineWiki. I guess bevor this date there will be some more new zines and articles added to this network;-) --[[User:Silent service|Silent service]] 22:41, 15 January 2013 (UTC)<br />
<br />
== SZFest zinewiki page copy of newspaper article ==<br />
<br />
[[Scranton Zine Fest]] is a copy of http://www.theweekender.com/cover/Real_social_networking_06-07-2011.html "by Stephanie DeBalko Weekender Staff Writer". Delete and then restart? --[[User:EarthFurst|EarthFurst]] 08:55, 28 January 2013 (UTC)<br />
<br />
Absolutely! Thanks for noticing!! [[User:InvisibleFriend|InvisibleFriend]] 12:48, 29 January 2013 (UTC)<br />
<br />
Hi, that was my zine page. All of those are reviews of the festival actually that I wanted to mke not eof on that page - Jess Meoni, SZF Coordinator<br />
<br />
== zine with the same title (duplicate) ==<br />
hello everybody. what do you do when there is a zine with the same title as an already existing article? are there some existing examples? any suggestions?--[[User:Silent service|Silent service]] 21:56, 11 March 2013 (UTC)<br />
:Hi! Yes, I've done a couple of things - if there are only two zines of the same title and they were published in different decades, I'll use the date, such as [[Bizarre (1950s)]]. If they were published in different countries, you can use the country,such as [[Oz (UK)]], If there are 3 titles, I use the editors name, like with [[Chaos (Miske)]]. I'm personally going to stick to using the editors name from now on, because there's really no way of knowing for sure if, for example, there were actually two zines called "Oz" published in the UK, in which case I'll have to go to all the trouble of changing it! I used the editor's name for ''Chaos'' zine because even though I didn't research it, I could imagine there might have been a few zines called "Chaos". So that's probably your best choice. [[User:InvisibleFriend|InvisibleFriend]] 07:26, 12 March 2013 (UTC)<br />
<br />
thanks! ...and a related topic: '''zines without a title (untitled)!?''' I think I will do it like: [[Untitled (finks)]] for example.--[[User:Silent service|Silent service]] 20:09, 18 March 2013 (UTC)<br />
:You are welcome! [[Untitled (Editor)]] sounds good. [[User:InvisibleFriend|InvisibleFriend]] 23:05, 18 March 2013 (UTC)<br />
<br />
== xZINECOREx ==<br />
Zine librarians are making a metadata standard to help with cataloging zines. Please consider including a table with [[Xzinecorex|xZINECOREx]] metadata when you are adding or editing entries for zines on ZineWiki; it will help their efforts to create a zine union catalog (a combined catalog that describes the collections of multiple libraries, enabling better information sharing for zine library collections). [[User:Jerianne|Jerianne]] 17:18, 19 July 2014 (UTC)</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Talk:Jerianne_Thompson&diff=101698Talk:Jerianne Thompson2014-07-03T04:18:44Z<p>Jerianne: </p>
<hr />
<div>You can use this space to leave me messages or questions. For a quicker response, email me: zineworld at gmail. <br />
<br />
If you have questions about using the site, need help with editing, etc., talk to [[Dan Halligan]].<br />
<br />
==favour==<br />
Re: favour. I tried to revert it, but what ended up happening unfortunately, is that now there is no content. I tried to revert this, but the content that was there doesn't come up when "editing" is chosen. Frankly, I now have no idea how to proceed. The "undo" function will not go back to the original content. What I think we should immediately do is to eliminate the "redirect" function for editors at ZineWiki. Sorry i couldn't be of any help. [[User:InvisibleFriend|InvisibleFriend]] 22:16, 28 March 2009 (UTC)<br />
<br />
:Actually I seem to have fixed it! Try [[ZineWiki: Introduction]]. Where the link is to get to this page is what I don't know. [[User:InvisibleFriend|InvisibleFriend]] 22:21, 28 March 2009 (UTC)<br />
::Yay! Thank you! I've been on the road most of today and didn't have time to figure it out. [[User:Jerianne|Jerianne]] 02:05, 29 March 2009 (UTC)<br />
<br />
==Re:Internet (and spam)==<br />
Barnard University plans to let their summer intern contribute some content to zinewiki. Any particular areas you think she should focus on?<br />
<br />
Also, re: all the spam lately. What do you think about implementing a captcha? Jerianne 00:44, 1 June 2011 (UTC) <br />
<br />
:Hi Jerianne, That's good news about the help from Barnard University! More articles about any new zines would be great, but probably most importantly, there have been many zines published that it's impossible to find info for on-line - if they could concentrate on the zines they have in their collection that are not mentioned anywhere on line, that would be good, I think. <br />
<br />
:In regards to the spam. ANYTHING, any solution you can think of would be much appreciated!! It's getting ridiculous! [[User:InvisibleFriend|InvisibleFriend]] 03:37, 2 June 2011 (UTC)<br />
<br />
::Hi Jerianne! I don't think anything would be a bigger burden than dealing with the spam. I have to delete it everyday, and usually twice a day. I am willing to try any solution.[[User:InvisibleFriend|InvisibleFriend]] 07:09, 6 December 2011 (UTC)</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Mimi_Nguyen&diff=74172Mimi Nguyen2013-01-16T06:49:39Z<p>Jerianne: /* Links */</p>
<hr />
<div>Throughout the 1990s, '''Mimi Nguyen''' published the [[zine]]s [[Aim Your Dick]], [[Slant]] (later changed to [[Slander]]), and edited the compilation zine [[Evolution of a Race Riot]] (later shortened to [[Race Riot]]). She contributed to zines such as [[How to Stage a Coup]], [[Hard as Nails]], and [[Sty Zine]], in addition to being a regular columnist for [[Punk Planet]] and "shitworker" for [[Maximumrocknroll]]. <br />
<br />
Nguyen holds a PhD in Ethnic Studies from the University of California, Berkeley. She is currently an associate professor of gender and women's studies and Asian American studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her first book, called ''The Gift of Freedom: War, Debt, and Other Refugee Passages'', focuses on the promise of "giving" freedom concurrent and contingent with waging war and its afterlife (Duke University Press, 2012). She also co-edited ''Alien Encounters: Pop Culture in Asian America '' (Duke University Press, 2007) and co-writes Threadbared, a research blog on the politics of fashion and beauty. She has written numerous articles and book chapters about about race, gender, punk, and [[Riot Grrrl|riot grrrl]].<br />
<br />
In 2011, she became an active collaborator in the [[POC Zine Project]] (founded by [[Daniela Capistrano]]), scanning and distributing both issues of [[Race Riot]] online and organizing donations of zines by people of color to academic archives and zine libraries. In September and October 2012, Nguyen went on the first POC Zine Project/Race Riot! Tour, with Mariam Bastani ([[Maximumrocknroll]]), Anna Vo ([[Fix Your Head]]), [[Osa Atoe]] ([[Shotgun Seamstress]]), and [[Cristy Road]]. <br />
<br />
===Zines===<br />
*[[Aim Your Dick]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Slander]]<br />
<br />
===Contributions===<br />
*[[How to Stage a Coup]]<br />
*[[Maximum Rock N Roll]]<br />
*[[Hard as Nails]]<br />
*[[Punk Planet]]<br />
*[[Sty Zine]]<br />
<br />
===Publications===<br />
<br />
* ''The Gift of Freedom: War, Debt, and Other Refugee Passages'', Duke University Press, 2012<br />
* ''Alien Encounters: Pop Culture in Asian America'', Duke University Press, 2007<br />
<br />
==Links==<br />
* [http://www.mimithinguyen.com/ MimiThiNguyen.com]<br />
* [http://threadandcircuits.wordpress.com/ threadandcircuits.wordpress.com/]<br />
* [http://iheartthreadbared.wordpress.com/ iheartthreadbared.wordpress.com/]<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zinester|Nguyen]] [[Category:POC Zinester|Nguyen]]</div>Jeriannehttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Mimi_Nguyen&diff=74171Mimi Nguyen2013-01-16T06:47:43Z<p>Jerianne: wikifying, adding content</p>
<hr />
<div>Throughout the 1990s, '''Mimi Nguyen''' published the [[zine]]s [[Aim Your Dick]], [[Slant]] (later changed to [[Slander]]), and edited the compilation zine [[Evolution of a Race Riot]] (later shortened to [[Race Riot]]). She contributed to zines such as [[How to Stage a Coup]], [[Hard as Nails]], and [[Sty Zine]], in addition to being a regular columnist for [[Punk Planet]] and "shitworker" for [[Maximumrocknroll]]. <br />
<br />
Nguyen holds a PhD in Ethnic Studies from the University of California, Berkeley. She is currently an associate professor of gender and women's studies and Asian American studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her first book, called ''The Gift of Freedom: War, Debt, and Other Refugee Passages'', focuses on the promise of "giving" freedom concurrent and contingent with waging war and its afterlife (Duke University Press, 2012). She also co-edited ''Alien Encounters: Pop Culture in Asian America '' (Duke University Press, 2007) and co-writes Threadbared, a research blog on the politics of fashion and beauty. She has written numerous articles and book chapters about about race, gender, punk, and [[Riot Grrrl|riot grrrl]].<br />
<br />
In 2011, she became an active collaborator in the [[POC Zine Project]] (founded by [[Daniela Capistrano]]), scanning and distributing both issues of [[Race Riot]] online and organizing donations of zines by people of color to academic archives and zine libraries. In September and October 2012, Nguyen went on the first POC Zine Project/Race Riot! Tour, with Mariam Bastani ([[Maximumrocknroll]]), Anna Vo ([[Fix Your Head]]), [[Osa Atoe]] ([[Shotgun Seamstress]]), and [[Cristy Road]]. <br />
<br />
===Zines===<br />
*[[Aim Your Dick]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Slander]]<br />
<br />
===Contributions===<br />
*[[How to Stage a Coup]]<br />
*[[Maximum Rock N Roll]]<br />
*[[Hard as Nails]]<br />
*[[Punk Planet]]<br />
*[[Sty Zine]]<br />
<br />
===Publications===<br />
<br />
* ''The Gift of Freedom: War, Debt, and Other Refugee Passages'', Duke University Press, 2012<br />
* ''Alien Encounters: Pop Culture in Asian America'', Duke University Press, 2007<br />
<br />
==Links==<br />
* [http://www.mimithinguyen.com/]<br />
* [http://threadandcircuits.wordpress.com/ threadandcircuits.wordpress.com/]<br />
* [http://iheartthreadbared.wordpress.com/ iheartthreadbared.wordpress.com/]<br />
<br />
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[[Category:Zinester|Nguyen]] [[Category:POC Zinester|Nguyen]]</div>Jerianne